
Alien Clay
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Narrated by:
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Ben Allen
About this listen
Alien Clay is a thrilling far-future adventure by acclaimed Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning author Adrian Tchaikovsky.
This audiobook edition includes an exclusive interview between Ben Allen and Adrian Tchaikovsky.
They travelled into the unknown and left themselves behind . . .
On the distant world of Kiln lie the ruins of an alien civilization. It’s the greatest discovery in humanity’s spacefaring history – yet who were its builders and where did they go?
Professor Arton Daghdev had always wanted to study alien life up close. Then his wishes become a reality in the worst way. His political activism sees him exiled from Earth to Kiln’s extrasolar labour camp. There, he’s condemned to work under an alien sky until he dies.
Kiln boasts a ravenous, chaotic ecosystem like nothing seen on Earth. The monstrous alien life interacts in surprising, sometimes shocking ways with the human body, so Arton will risk death on a daily basis. However, the camp’s oppressive regime might just kill him first. If Arton can somehow escape both fates, the world of Kiln holds a wondrous, terrible secret. It will redefine life and intelligence as he knows it, and might just set him free . . .
‘A warning for a future we don’t want . . . Highly recommended’ – Tade Thompson
‘Unputdownable. Adrian Tchaikovsky is fast becoming the voice of his generation in British SF’ – Stephen Baxter
‘One of our finest writers of SF right now . . . an excellent story told with Adrian's trademark skill and flair’ – James Oswald
The protagonist is sarcastic narrates the thoughts and feelings of an exiled academic who failed to be the kind of revolutionary he wanted to be on dictatorship earth.
Perhaps what is most terrifying is not the Elephant's Dad who stampedes through the forest, or the cackling infected researcher who hoots and laughs in the night, but the fact that the human society known as the Mandate feels as though it really could lie in our real world future.
The most imaginative alien biology in modern science fiction
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1984 Meets Avatar
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One might say that not much happens in the book, BUT if you are searching for something extraordinary alien, highly imaginative, and thought-provoking, this is the book for you.
For my part, it is like having an old wish fulfilled: since I first saw Alien I found myself trying to change my position, like I could see hidden angles and explore more of that massive derelict ship full of dormant Xenomorph eggs.
Surely, that ship had a full story to tell... too bad that it was so infested, that the expedition was a disaster... no time to explore there...
Alien Clay gave me the chance to explore... without the terror of the Xenomorphs.
Yet, the alien life form on Kiln carries a lot of unknown danger, so much so that for a while I was afraid that some gruesome monsters would burst out from the humans trapped there...
But there is beauty and mystery too...
I will listen to it again!
Alien meets Avatar, meets 1984
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An interesting premise of political dissidents sent to a far flung life bearing planet. The “intrigue” eventually raise to an interesting point of rather drawn out over the length of the book.
Worthy of a listen if you’re looking….
The filler
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Adrian Tchaikovsky is such a good writer, his humans and aliens are brilliantly interwoven. Xeno-biologist and freedom fighter, Arton Daghdev, is exiled for his crimes to an alien planet where he's imprisoned under an oppressive regime. At first he's given some status because of his scientific work, but he's soon busted to a basic work detail in the toxic atmosphere of this very alien planet. He is tasked with discovering the origin of alien ruins, and the mystery of who the builders were, and where are they now. And he does indeed make that discovery, but not in the way the camp commandant expects him to.
Thought provoking
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Always clever and well written.
Another brilliant book. Superb narration
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Good idea but not alot happens.
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what stood out most:
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I loved the ending, it satisfies you but also keeps you questioning. It is a stand-alone book and it does conclude the story neatly. A second book is possible but not a must.
I loved how accurate the science is in the story. It's not magic in disguise, it doesn't even provide shortcuts for the plot's sake like having a quick way to space travel. Though I like those stories as well, a pure science fiction hits different.
I loved the main character's scientist mind that keeps being curious in extreme situations without being unrealistic. It was quite satisfying to read the dynamic between him and the commandant. And I loved the comment the writer made on it in the interview which you can listen at the end of the book.
Psychologic and Sociologic effects of isolation vs connection
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Another great book by Adrian Tchaikovsky
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