Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton

Nights Dawn Trilogy is a space opera style science fiction series written by Peter F Hamilton and set within the Confederation Universe. The series consists of The Reality Disfunction, The Neutronium Alchemist and the Naked God.

reviews in the series

The Naked God

by Peter F Hamilton

The Naked God by Peter F Hamilton

The Naked God is the third novel in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton.

Sitting with the final and conclusive volume of The Nights Dawn and looking at it's massive 1150 pages (at 1.5Kg it's just about the heaviest book I've ever read), I felt kind of intimidated. My faith in Hamilton and his ability to keep up the pace and deliver something that could justify all those pages, started to falter. I felt weak. I felt drained of energy even before I had turned the first pa...

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reviewed on Wednesday 01 March 2000

The Neutronium Alchemist

by Peter F Hamilton

The Neutronium Alchemist by Peter F Hamilton

The Neutronium Alchemist is the second volume in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton.

In The Reality Dysfunction, the presence of an energy-based alien lifeform during the death of a human on the colony world of Lalonde somehow "jammed open" the interface between this universe and "the beyond", an energistic vacuum where the souls of dead humans (and possibly other races) have become trapped after death. They are able to cross back over into this universe and p...

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reviewed on Tuesday 01 February 2000

The Reality Dysfunction

by Peter F Hamilton

The Reality Dysfunction by Peter F Hamilton

The Reality Dysfunction is the first volume in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter Hamilton.

In the far future, humanity has divided along a single major line. The Edenists are genetically engineered space-dwellers with telepathic affinity to their biotechnological homes and ships. Adamists are effectively the Luddites of the future, willing to pioneer new worlds much as their ancestors did hundreds of years previously. The two clash on a primitive world called Lalonde, involving ...

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reviewed on Saturday 01 January 2000