The Ringworld Throne
The Ringworld Throne book cover

The Ringworld Throne

Price
$7.98
Publisher
Del Rey
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345412966
Dimensions
4.18 x 1.02 x 6.72 inches
Weight
0.014 ounces

Description

“Niven’s work has been an intriguing and consistent universe, and this book is the keystone of the arch. . . . [His] technique is wonderfully polished, his characters and their situations are nicely drawn . . . wraps up (maybe) a corner of a very interesting universe.” — San Diego Union-Tribune From the Publisher Long ago and far away, Larry Niven intended to write a big book for Del Rey. It was to continue another series, not Ringworld, and eventually it became clear that this new book just wasn't coming to life for him. So there we were in Florida, walking from the hotel to the convention center, when Larry worriedly confessed to me that the book wasn't happening. "You know," I said understandingly, "it doesn't have to be this particular book. If you wanted to write a different 'big' book, that would be okay. Say, another Ringworld book." (Okay, so I was being a bit manipulative!) I didn't think anything would come of that--until Barbara Hambly talked Larry into doing a Ringworld story for her vampire anthology and the rest is history. --Shelly Shapiro, Executive Editor From the Inside Flap Come back to the Ringworld . . . the most astonishing feat of engineering ever encountered. A place of untold technological wonders, home to a myriad humanoid races, and world of some of the most beloved science fiction stories ever written! The human, Louis Wu; the puppeteer known as the Hindmost; Acolyte, son of the Kzin called Chmeee . . . legendary beings brought together once again in the defense of the Ringworld. Something is going on with the Protectors. Incoming spacecraft are being destroyed before they can reach the Ringworld. Vampires are massing. And the Ghouls have their own agenda--if anyone dares approach them to learn. Each race on the Ringworld has always had its own Protector. Now it looks as if the Ringworld itself needs a Protector. But who will sit on the Ringworld Throne? "Niven's work has been an intriguing and consistent universe, and this book is the keystone of the arch. . . . [His] technique is wonderfully polished, his characters and their situations are nicely drawn . . . wraps up (maybe) a corner of a very interesting universe."--San Diego Union-Tribune In the twenty-ninth century, Louis Wu, a 200-years-young adventurer, became one of the first humans from Known Space to set foot on the Ringworld, and his exploits there became legends among many of the native races. During Louis Wu's second sojourn on the Ringworld, he was able to save it from total destruction... but several hundred million people died anyway, and that was a mighty weight on one man's conscience. But odd events on the Ringworld would require Louis Wu's attention once again: Vampires were gathering in untold numbers; Protectors, immensely powerful beings dedicated to safeguarding their own bloodlines above all else, were interfering with species not their own and with each other. If the Ringworld was to remain intact, it was going to need one central Protector of its own. But who would sit on the Ringworld Throne?... Larry Niven was born in 1938 in Los Angeles, California. In 1956, he entered the California Institute of Technology, only to flunk out a year and a half later after discovering a bookstore jammed with used science-fiction magazines. He graduated with a B.A. in mathematics (minor in psychology) from Washburn University, Kansas, in 1962, and completed one year of graduate work before he dropped out to write. His first published story, “The Coldest Place,” appeared in the December 1964 issue of Worlds of If . He won the Hugo Award for Best Short Story in 1966 for “Neutron Star” and in 1974 for “The Hole Man.” The 1975 Hugo Award for Best Novelette was given to The Borderland of Sol . His novel Ringworld won the 1970 Hugo Award for Best Novel, the 1970 Nebula Award for Best Novel, and the 1972 Ditmar, an Australian award for Best International Science Fiction. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Excerpt: Chapter One: A WAR OF SCENTS A.D. 2892 Cloud covered the sky like a gray stone plate. The yellow grass had a wilted look: too much rain, not enough sun. No doubt the sun was straight overhead and the Arch was still in place, but Valavirgillin hadn't seen either for twenty days now. The cruisers rolled through an endless drizzle, through high grass, on wheels as tall as a man. Vala and Kay rode the steering bench; Barok rode above them as gunner. Barok's daughter Forn was asleep under an awning. Any day now--any hour-- Sabarokaresh pointed. "Is that what you've been looking for?" Valavirgillin stood up in her seat. She could just see where the vastness of grass turned to a vastness of stubble. Kaywerbrimmis said, "They leave this pattern. We'll be seeing sentries or a harvesting party. Boss, I don't understand how you knew they'd be Grass Giants here. I've never been this far to starboard myself. You, you're from Center City? That's a hundred daywalks to port." "Word came to me," Valavirgillin said. He didn't ask more. A merchant's secrets were her own. They rolled into the stubble and turned. The cruisers rolled faster now. Stubble to right, shoulder-high grass to the left. Far ahead, birds were wheeling and diving. Big dark birds: scavengers. Kaywerbrimmis touched his handguns for reassurance. Muzzle-loading, the barrels as long as his forearm. Big Sabarokaresh eased back into the turret. The top of the payload shell housed the cannon, and that might be needed. The other wagons were swinging left and right, covering Kay's wagon so that he could investigate in safety. The birds wheeled away. They'd left black feathers everywhere. Twenty big birds, gorged until they could hardly fly. What might feed so many? Bodies. Little hominids with pointy skulls, lying some in stubble, some in uncut grass, stripped of most of their meat. Hundreds! They might have been children, but the children among them were even smaller. Vala looked for clothing. In strange terrain you never knew which hominids might be intelligent. Sabarokaresh dropped to earth, gun in hand. Kaywerbrimmis hesitated; but nothing sudden popped out of the grass, and he followed. Foranayeedli popped a sleepy head through the window and gaped. She was a girl of sixty falans or so, just reaching mating age. "Since last night," Kay said presently. The smell of corruption wasn't strong yet. If Ghouls hadn't arrived before the birds, then these victims must have been slain near dawn. Vala asked, "How did they die? If this is local Grass Giant practice, we want none of it." "This could've been done by birds. Cracked bones, see? But cracked by big beaks, for marrow. These are Gleaners, Boss. See, this is how they dress, in feathers. They follow the harvesters. The Gleaners hunt smeerps, firedots, anything that digs. Cutting the grass exposes the burrows." --Feathers, right. These feathers were black and red and purple-green, not just black. "So what happened here?" Forn said, "I know that smell." Beneath the corruption: what? Something familiar, not itself unpleasant ... but it made Foranayeedli uneasy. Valavirgillin had hired Kaywerbrimmis to lead the caravan because he was local, because he seemed competent. The rest were his people. None had ever been this far to starboard. Vala knew more of this place than any of them ... if she was right about where she was. "Well, where are they?" "Watching us, maybe," Kay said. Vala could see a long way from her perch at the bow of the cruiser. The veldt was flat, the yellow grass was chopped short. Grass Giants stood seven and eight feet tall. Where grass stood half their height, could they hide in that? The traders pulled their cruisers into a triangle. Their midday dinner was fruit and roots from stores on the running boards. They cooked some local grass with the roots. They'd caught no fresh meat. They took their time. Most hominids were more approachable after feeding. If Grass Giants thought like Machine People, they would let strangers eat before they made contact. No ambassador came. The caravan rolled on. Three cruisers rolled sluggishly across the veldt with no animal to pull them. Big square wooden platforms rode four wheels at the corners; the motor, centered aft, turned two more drive wheels. The cast-iron payload shell rode ahead of the motor, like an iron house with a fat chimney. Big leaf springs were under the bow, under the steering bench. A savage might wonder at the tower on the payload housing, but what would he think if he had never seen a cannon? Harmless. Shapes the color of the golden grass, shapes too big to be men: two big humanoids watched from the crest of a far hill. Vala saw them only when one turned and loped away across the veldt. The other ran along the crest, toward where the cruisers would cross. He waited in their path, watching them come. He was nearly the color of the golden grass: golden skin, golden mane. Big. Armed with a great curved sword. Kaywerbrimmis walked to meet the giant. Valavirgillin set the cruiser following him like a friendly ridebeast. Distance put strange twists in the trade dialect. Kaywerbrimmis had tried to teach Vala some of the variations in pronunciation, new words and altered meanings. She listened now, trying to make out what Kay was saying. "We come in peace ... intend to trade ... Farsight Trading ... rishathra?" The giant's eyes flicked back and forth while Kay talked. Back and forth between their jaws, Forn and Vala and Kay and Barok. The giant was amused. His face was hairier than any Machine Person's! Pretty Forn's jawline fringe of beard just growing, just long enough to take a curl at the corners. Vala's was turning elegantly white, two points at the chin. Other hominids were too often distracted by Machine People beards, especially on the women. The giant waited out Kay's chattering, then strode past him and took a seat on the cruiser's running board. He leaned against the payload shell and immediately jerked away from the hot metal. Recovered his dignity and waved the cruiser forward. Big Barok held his post above the giant. Forn climbed up beside her father. She was tall, too, but the giant made them both look stunted. Kaywerbrimmis asked, "Your camp, that way?" The giant's dialect was less comprehensible. "Yes. Come. You want shelter. We want warriors." "How do you practice rishathra?" It was the first thing any trader would want to know, and any beta male, too, if these were like Grass Giants elsewhere. The giant said, "Come quick, else learn too much of rishathra." "What?" "Vampires." Forn's eyes widened. "That smell!" Kay smiled, seeing not a threat, but an opportunity. "I am Kaywerbrimmis. Here are Valavirgillin, my patron, and Sabarokaresh and Foranayeedli. In the other cruisers they are Machine People, too. We hope to persuade you to join our Empire." "I am Paroom. Our leader you must address as Thurl." Vala let Kay do the talking. Grass Giant sword-scythes had too little reach. Farsight Trading's guns would make short work of a vampire attack. That should impress the Bull, and then--business. Grass Giants, scores of them, were pulling wagons filled with grass through the gap in a wall of heaped earth. "This isn't normal," Kaywerbrimmis said. "Grass Giants don't build walls." Paroom heard. "We had to learn. Forty-three falans ago the Reds were fighting us. We learned walls from them." Forty-three falans was 430 rotations of the star patterns, where the sky rotated every seven and a half days. In forty falans Valavirgillin had made herself rich, had mated, had carried four children, then gambled her wealth away. These last three falans she had been traveling. Forty-three falans was a long time. She asked or tried to ask, "Was that when the clouds came?" "Yes, when the old Thurl boiled a sea." Yes! This was the place she sought. Kaywerbrimis shrugged it off as local superstition. "How long have you had vampires?" Paroom said, "Always there are some. In this last few falans, suddenly they are everywhere, more every night. This morning we found nearly two hundred Gleaners, all dead. Tonight they will hunger again. The walls and our crossbows hold them back. Here," said the sentry, "bring your wagons through the gap and prepare them to fight." They had crossbows ? And the light was going. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Come back to the Ringworld . . . the most astonishing feat of engineering ever encountered.  A place of untold technological wonders, home to a myriad humanoid races, and world of some of the most beloved science fiction stories ever written!
  • The human, Louis Wu; the puppeteer known as the Hindmost; Acolyte, son of the Kzin called Chmeee . . . legendary beings brought together once again in the defense of the Ringworld. Something is going on with the Protectors. Incoming spacecraft are being destroyed before they can reach the Ringworld.  Vampires are massing. And the Ghouls have their own agenda—if anyone dares approach them to learn.Each race on the Ringworld has always had its own Protector. Now it looks as if the Ringworld itself needs a Protector. But who will sit on the Ringworld Throne?
  • “Niven’s work has been an intriguing and consistent universe, and this book is the keystone of the arch. . . . [His] technique is wonderfully polished, his characters and their situations are nicely drawn . . . wraps up (maybe) a corner of a very interesting universe.”—
  • San Diego Union-Tribune

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(71)
★★★★
25%
(59)
★★★
15%
(36)
★★
7%
(17)
23%
(54)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A pointless, directionless sequel

Larry Niven's Ringworld (1970) is one of the truly great SF novels. A crew of four, comprising Louis Wu, a cynical, 200-year-old man; Teela Brown, a young woman bred for luck; Speaker-to-Animals, an aggressive, cat-like Kzin; and Nessus, a Pierson's Puppeteer, a technologically advanced race whose highest virtue is cowardice. The four of them go exploring on a recently discovered artifact: a gigantic ring a million miles wide and as big around as Earth's orbit.
The sequel, The Ringworld Engineers (1980), starts twenty years later, with Louis Wu and Speaker (now known as Chmeee) returning to the Ringworld with the Hindmost, the deposed leader of the Puppeteers, to find a supposed transmutation device that the Hindmost thinks will help restore him to power. Along the way they discover various alien civilizations, Vampires (non-sentient, blood-eating hominids), and Ghouls (eaters of the dead who trade in information). They also learn that the orbit of the Ringworld has become eccentric and it will destroy itself in a matter of years unless they can save it.
And then . . . there's The Ringworld Throne, where the only mystery yet to solve is, apparently, "Who are you, and what have you done with the real Larry Niven?" To say that Throne is a disappointing sequel is an understatement.
The story picks up about a year after The Ringworld Engineers leaves off. Louis Wu and his motley crew are still stranded on the Ringworld after human-turned-Pak-protector Teela buried their spaceship under tons of lava. Unfortunately, Niven has changed a major premise of the last book. Engineers ended with an unthinkable moral dilemma: whether to allow the Ringworld and its trillions of occupants to be destroyed, or save it at the cost of several hundred million lives. This should weigh mighty heavily on Louis Wu's mind, but Niven lets him off the hook: the Hindmost announces that he could control the Ringworld's meteor defenses more precisely than anticipated, and thus was able to minimize the deaths. Had this been revealed at the end of Engineers it would be a hideous deus ex machina. As it is, it's just very sloppy writing; Niven conveniently no longer has to deal with a more complex protagonist.
From here, Throne is basically two intertwined but generally unrelated stories. The first deals with an infestation of Vampires. Louis Wu is legendary on the Ringworld for once boiling an ocean to destroy a field of mirror sunflowers (which kill their prey by focusing sunlight on it and burning it). The resulting cloud cover cut off their light. However, one unintended consequence of this feat is a never-ending overcast sky, ideal for the spreading of Vampires. This, Niven gets right; all actions, however noble, may have unintended side effects that are not so good. The resulting battle between the locals and the Vampires drives about two-thirds of the novel's action.
It's unfortunate that the vast majority of this action involves neither the principal characters nor the mysteries of the Ringworld itself. The appeal of the Ringworld novels is directly proportional to the amount of time Louis Wu spends exploring it. Instead we are treated to four or five different species of hominids comprising thirty-odd interchangeable individuals with unpronounceable names, alternately fighting vampires and "rishing" with each other (i.e. inter-species sex for the sake of binding contracts or forging friendships). It's monotonous, and in the end, there's no payoff. No more of the Ringworld's mysteries are revealed.
Meanwhile, Louis Wu and the Hindmost are investigating why the Ringworld's remaining Pak protectors are destroying incoming ships and interfering with species other than their own. This part of the novel is completely incomprehensible, and I won't even attempt to explain what goes on. It doesn't help that the majority of the action is viewed through telescopes, communication devices, and so forth. Finally, we get to follow the principal characters around, and the story is a mess.
This novel reveals nothing new about the mysteries of the Ringworld, nor does it develop the characters or the series' plot any further. If Ringworld's Children can't make sense of all this, then sadly one of the great hard-SF world ends not with a bang, but a whimper.
102 people found this helpful
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Embarrassingly terrible

The third (and final, thank god) installation in the Ringworld series falls so far short of its predecessors that it leaves an unfortunate stain on the entire trilogy, which up to book 3 has been remarkable in the world of science fiction. Ringworld Throne left me so confused and angry that I'm not quite sure what to warn potential readers to expect, but here are a few that topped my list:

- The plot makes no sense at all. The entire thing is so disjointed, badly pieced together, and overall just poorly written it makes you wonder if Niven even put any effort into the book, or was just looking for some easy money. The first half is horrendous, focusing on a group of Ringworlders fighting some vampire infestation. Every character is completely flat and lifeless, and the vampire hunting episode does not fit at all into the overall plot of the book, despite the fact it fills half the pages. I skimmed through so many of the pages its ridiculous. Awful, awful, awful.

- There is absolutely no reason to give characters such absurd names. All it does to make up 13 syllable names is piss the reader off. Just stop it.

- Rishanthra is fricken stupid. Why so much focus on it? How does sex between species allow trade and communication between them? It just makes no sense, and it's really lost its novelty by this point. It comes up so often it makes Niven look like a sex-crazed teenage nerd who really doesn't know anything about sex at all.

- The "ending", if you can call it that, resolves nothing, and frankly doesn't make any sense. I know this goes back to my problem with the overall plot, but really: the ending is terrible. What happens to Louis? The ARM ships? Hindmost? Does anyone really care at this point?

- Action scenes are so terrible it makes the plot look sensible. Anytime something major happens (e.g. battle scene) I find myself rereading the paragraph 3 times and still having no idea what the hell is going on. Niven's writing is so hacky in some areas it makes me furious.

Well, I think you get the idea. I highly reccommend against this book, it was such a waste of time. Even if you loved Ringworld Engineers, I can almost guarentee you will hate this one.
24 people found this helpful
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Stop Reading Before its Too Late

The 'professional' reviews for this book are much too kind.
Compared to Ringworld and Ringworld Engineers, Throne is a major disappointment through and through. I just kept slogging along through the unreadable narrative, uninteresting characters with unpronounceable names whizzing by my head, looking forward to every sensible moment with Louis and the Hindmost. I only finished reading it because the Protectors storyline finally started to get my interest in the end.
I should have stopped reading at page 100.
23 people found this helpful
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Rish this, Niven!

I trudged through one quarter of this book and could not take any more. I am a big fan of Niven's known space series and I even enjoyed Ringworld Engineers. Throne is about the hominid species of the Ringworld banding together to have mass orgies. Meanwhile, Louis Wu is nowhere nearby doing unrelated nothings. Meanwhile, the Hindmost is doing a mating dance with holograms. Meanwhile, Speaker to Animals is not around. Meanwhile, the interspecial orgies get interrupted by vampires. Meanwhile, I gave up.
If the orgies were edited out (seriously, rishathra is mentioned on every page) entirely, it might be an acceptable book. I really wanted to read the answers to the questions raised in Engineers even if this book were more of a fizzle than a bang for the Ringworld stories. Oh well.
19 people found this helpful
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Surely this can't be Larry Niven!

First off-I love Niven's work. I got hooked on him about a year ago when I read Ringworld. After that, I went back and read the entire Known Space series in a rough chronological order. This series is very good.
However, about 100 pages into Ringworld Throne, I had to log into this site and look up the reviews to make sure I hadn't landed in the Twilight Zone. Sure enough, most people had come to the conclusions I had...this book is horrible.
First off, he uses too many rediculously long names with shallow characters that you can't possibly keep track of (the cast of characters in the back of the book might help with this). About 30 pages in, I found myself just skipping over the names and trying to get an idea of where he was going with the plot.
Second, the narrative is so disjointed and difficult to read it is hard to believe this is the person who created the astounding original Ringworld novel.
It is very rare that I do not finish a book, but after 100 pages, I just couldn't stand it any longer.
Sorry Larry...this book hurt. Despite the love I have for your work, this novel receives one star.
19 people found this helpful
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It feels almost like each page needs to be about 1/2 a page ...

I am writing this as as a counter balance to the negative reviews here.

There is no doubt Larry Niven's writing style is an acquired taste. It is often (every other page or so) difficult, if not impossible, to tell who is actually talking, what precisely they are talking about, and the significance of what they say. It feels almost like each page needs to be about 1/2 a page longer to make room for the missing exposition that would make it all make sense.

That's not going to happen. If you are willing to let go of needing a detailed, specific linear narrative, let go of needing to know who is talking, and even which character is which, and simply accept that Niven writes in what I call "bursts of brilliance" strung together, you will see what it's like to be Louis Wu-- because you'll be thinking like him. Things happen, people die, sex (rishathra) is handled as a commodity and a way for different "tribes" to negotiate & trade with each other... all linked with and by Niven's bright mind, skipping along a gigantic idea (Ringworld), like a skipping stone or a stepping disk; contained in an even larger, more thrilling and mysterious gigantic idea (the universe). Acquired taste, yes.. and for those who acquire it, rewards galore.
12 people found this helpful
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A Pointless Third Installment of the Ring World series

The third book of the Ring World series is pretty pointless to the series. Two Thirds of the book is about The Machine people and other hominids that align themselves to fight a vampire menace. This could have been a separate book by itself, albeit not a very good one. Finally after trudging forward you get back to the story of Louis Wu the Hindmost and Chmee's son Acolyte who have been indentured to serve a protector Bram who is shooting down ARM ships approaching the Ring World for reasons never revealed. Our characters get involved in a Protector power grab and then to the non climatic ending of this story with myself the reader wondering what was the point of reading this book. I am going to read Children of the Ring World and am hoping it is a much better read than this one. This is a update the last quarter of this book should have been the beginning of Ringworlds Children which at the time of writing I am down to the last third of the book and is so far been a great read. Additionally it has a minimum of Rishathra which is a nice change of pace.
10 people found this helpful
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Exciting and enjoyable

The Ringworld Throne was the first book in the trilogy that I read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it - perhaps due to the fact that I did not have any pre-expectations about it, as so many of the other reviewers here did.
The first part of the book, which I enjoyed slightly better than the second, and which I thought made somewhat better sense, tells of the adventure of a group of Ringworld natives in their quest to free their land from the Ringworld vampires - hominid beings that are nonsentient, which feed on blood, and which lure their victims by using sexual pheromones. Niven does an excellent job of creating technologically disadvantaged characters who, nevertheless, have wit, intelligence, and considerable problem-solving skills, in stark contrast to the first Ringworld book, in which he simply portrays the Ringworld natives as brainless, stupid folk who automatically worship technology- bearing people as gods.
The first part of the book is an exciting adventure in the Ringworld, while the second is more interesting on an intellectual level. It tells how Louis Wu, the Hindmost, and Acolyte, (Kzin son of Chmee) become involved in the protector-struggles on the Ringworld.
As this was the first Niven book I read, I found some parts of it confusing, and one or two parts utterly incomprehensible, due to my lack of understanding of puppeteers, protectors, and kzinti. (Much of the behaviour of the characters in the second part of the book confused me, and the several discussions of events in the previous books made no sense at all to me). This did not, however, prevent me from thoroughly enjoying the book - and it is not true that the book was completely incomprehensible.
The paradox which this book creates is this: If you read it without reading the other two Ringworld Books first, you will inevitably be confused to some degree. However, if you do read the other books first, you will find that the third volume falls short of your expectations. I enjoyed Ringworld Throne, as I did not know what to expect, and I do not believe it to be an inferior book to the other two - it is only different.
8 people found this helpful
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A waste of time

This book is not worth reading. Half of the book is devoted to random ringworlders who dont matter and develop the plot in no way. I could not stand to read about nasty alien sex every three pages. I skipped almost every chapter not involving Louis or Acolyte (Chmee's son, who could have been an interesting addition but sadly was not). It made the book almost bearable. Overall you can skip this book and not miss anything. Here is all you need to know.

- There is a vampire protector in charge of the repair center.
- He sucks at his job
- Chmee has a son, Acolyte, whom he sent to learn wisdom from Louis.
- Louis decides that ghouls would make a better protector than a vampire
- He arranges it so that a ghoul becomes a protector and and overthrows the vampire protector
- This book sucks
6 people found this helpful
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Confusing, Disjointed

Let me say -- Ringworld floored me and dazzled me with scale and imagination. Ringworld Engineers also succeeded, though it wasn't as satisfying as the original novel. But this novel...something else entirely.
I had decided to get the novel to finish off the series. I saw many of the other reviews that gave it low stars, but I wanted to see the end of the series anyway. I have scarcely EVER been so confused in my life. I felt as if every 3rd paragraph of whatever original manuscript Niven wrote has been simply cut from the printed version.
It was disjointed. It was illogical. It didn't have focus. I would read with understanding for several paragraphs or a page and then it was as if some whole section was missing and I was in another scene or another logical conclusion, or a whole different character was interacting with the same character on the previous page w/o any real transition of how. While I understood the transfer disks and they had made sense in the other prior novels, here, when they were used, I found myself often not understanding what just happened. In some of the action scenes with Bram and Louis and the fights using the disks, I could barely follow what was going on, where he was - or even *who* he was. Sometimes it felt as if Bram would step on one disk and Louis would appear out of another -- and upside down.
And a huge focus on Vampires and Ghouls -- What was with this? Am I reading an Anne Rice wannabe or a science fiction novel? Ringworld was hardcore science fiction. The math was basically right, the scale was right. It was science fictin. The science in this version is minimal at best. I didn't buy the concept of Ghouls and Vampires on Ringworld. I also don't buy the trite theme that we humans are not the product of an original evolution, but an alien experiment gone wrong (Homo Habilus were the breeders of Pak Protectors? Greek gods were really Pak Protectors? I mean, come on!!!!)
Niven, despite a decent science background, pushes aside the whole body of evolution indicating the constant lineage from the cambrian explosion to homo sapien in favor of a trite and ignorant theme that we humans were basically an alien "transplant" to the worlds.
So, I have to concur with the bulk of other reviews. If you need to just get a little more Ringworld trivia, or want to finish off every word of the series, read the book. If you can put up with the disjointed writing here (which I did not feel in the other books) that is on virtually every page, you will eventually understand the bulk of the this novel. In retrospect, you can appreciate by inference, some of the things you've read. But I did not enjoy reading this novel as I did the other two. I had to force myself to keep turning the pages. And it was with relief rather than eagerness that I came to the last page.
6 people found this helpful