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Rama Revealed (1993)

by Arthur C. Clarke, Gentry Lee

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Rama Universe (4)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
2,902224,913 (3.42)19
Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:In the New York Timesâ??bestselling conclusion to the award-winning Rama series, a human colony aboard Rama III approaches the ultimate confrontation.

Two thousand humans have been trapped on the enormous spaceship Rama III, bound for the Raman Node orbiting Sirius. As they hurtle through interstellar space, the human population has formed a violent authoritarian societyâ??one that has imprisoned astronaut Nicole Wakefield. After a daring escape with help from her husband Richard, the Wakefields flee into the labyrinthine bowels of the ship, where they find themselves in the domain of the octospidersâ??technologically advanced beings that may be friend or foe.

As the human colony pursues the Wakefields, the situation aboard Rama III approaches all-out war. But Rama's Nodal intelligence is always watching . . .

Written by Clarke's longtime collaborator Gentry Lee, Rama Revealed marks the climax of the popular and critically acclaimed Rama seriesâ??in which humans finally encounter the advanced alien intelligences behind the vast and mysterious
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Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
The sad but epic conclusion to the Rama series did not disappoint. ( )
  David_Fosco | Mar 27, 2024 |
The final book in the series alternates between fascinating new insights into other alien civilisation and less interesting himan intrigue. The book is a blend on style between book 2 amd 3.

It is still a worthwhile read but careful analisys reveals many plot inconsistencies, the book is much closer to fantasy than hard sci-fi. ( )
  yates9 | Feb 28, 2024 |
Being the completist that I am I had to read this last and final installment of the RAMA series and after the Garden of Rama I was not hopeful that it was going to be a good ending. Boy was I surprised by how much I enjoyed it. Yes, there was a fair amount of fluff in the story with respect to reminiscing over what has happened in the past, but which great series does not do this, and it does have some appeal in terms of validating that we as the reader have walked the steps besides the book's protagonists and it also helps for folks who have questionable memories like I do. So yes, a whole lot of the book is devoted to the alien species and their biology's but this was also an enjoyable aspect of the story for me. The message was clear that the human race left to its own devices will self-implode and end in disaster and that humans may not be the most developed species in the universe and how would we deal with that eventuality. The ending does lead more to philosophical questions about the meaning and beginnings of life, the universe and yes off course GOD but there were only a few pages dedicated to this at the very ending. Overall, I believe that I enjoyed the Rama series and I look forward to the movie which I believe is in development phase as I write this review.
  thanesh | Jan 5, 2023 |
In my opinion, this was by far the best of the sequels.

They start by doing exactly what I wanted out of the middle two books: getting away from the human settlement and into a situation where they are learning and experiencing something strange. In this case, they go to live among the octospiders, an intelligent civilization highly skilled in genetics and biological science who are completely deaf and only speak in color. It's a fascinating and nicely thought out situation and I did like it.

Even when, halfway through the book, the focus shifts back partially to the rest of the human colony in Rama, it still maintains a tight focus, with the bigger scale events going on behind the scenes. There was still a particular feel of exploring how different societies deal with issues (such as war: the octospiders view all war as terrible, not just certain kinds).

The final section, when the return to another Node felt a little strange. Either because it was rushed or because it felt sort of artificial. I didn't particularly mind though, since it still was working out echoes of events from all of the previous books and acted as a sufficient capstone to the series. I did think it was nice that Michael and Simone make another appearance, even if the latter replied her mother's odd fixation with a two person continuation of the species.

At the very end, the book veers somewhat towards a philosophical / religions tangent, which felt a little odd (the Ramas are essentially God) but still thought provoking.

Overall, I was pleasantly surprised by this book. If you made it through the middle two books, you should probably read this one as well. ( )
  jpv0 | Jul 21, 2021 |
So, four years after my first attempt, I've finally finished the Rama series. This book, the fourth and final one in the quadrilogy, is not the worst of the batch. But then being better than the unmitigated drivel that was [b:The Garden of Rama|112518|The Garden of Rama (Rama, #3)|Arthur C. Clarke|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1171659410s/112518.jpg|876293] is not a particularly trying task.

Despite my misgivings that all the important things about Rama had been "revealed" in this book's predecessor, we do in fact find out who created Rama and its related infrastructure, and why. It's an answer that I feel should be powerful and thought provoking, but it's thrown out there by an unreliable figure, and then confirmed later by someone more reliable who also admits he might be wrong. Certainly, the answer seems like an attempt to make the series seem more profound, but instead serves to trivialise life, religion, and our Universe as a whole frankly.

The philosophical antics only arrive at the very end of the book, though. For the most part it's a dummy's guide to the biology and culture of the octospiders from [b:Rama II|10612691|Rama II (Rama, #2)|Arthur C. Clarke|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1298827472s/10612691.jpg|1907786]. This in itself is mildly interesting but doesn't really warrant the four hundred pages that it takes up. After that there's a lot of complaints about being old and then the last philosophical twenty pages. The last section just saves the book but I still wouldn't readily recommend it. ( )
  imlee | Jul 7, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
Only readers who are genuinely curious about the nature of the Rama enterprise and the mysterious intelligences behind it will find reason to struggle through this inert narrative.
added by stephmo | editNew York Times, Gerald Jonas (Mar 14, 1994)
 

» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Clarke, Arthur C.primary authorall editionsconfirmed
Lee, Gentrymain authorall editionsconfirmed
Cipriano, EllenDesignersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Corley, BobCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Youll, Jamie S. WarrenCover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Youll, StephenCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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"Nicole." At first the soft, mechanical voice seemed to be part of her dream.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:In the New York Timesâ??bestselling conclusion to the award-winning Rama series, a human colony aboard Rama III approaches the ultimate confrontation.

Two thousand humans have been trapped on the enormous spaceship Rama III, bound for the Raman Node orbiting Sirius. As they hurtle through interstellar space, the human population has formed a violent authoritarian societyâ??one that has imprisoned astronaut Nicole Wakefield. After a daring escape with help from her husband Richard, the Wakefields flee into the labyrinthine bowels of the ship, where they find themselves in the domain of the octospidersâ??technologically advanced beings that may be friend or foe.

As the human colony pursues the Wakefields, the situation aboard Rama III approaches all-out war. But Rama's Nodal intelligence is always watching . . .

Written by Clarke's longtime collaborator Gentry Lee, Rama Revealed marks the climax of the popular and critically acclaimed Rama seriesâ??in which humans finally encounter the advanced alien intelligences behind the vast and mysterious

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Haiku summary
Made it through book four.
So, now I know the secret.
Forty-two it ain't.
(osbaldistone)

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