What’s odd about this book is that it starts with an explanation of Yellowstone and the Glitter Band which would have been much better placed before Aurora Rising — which the lack thereof was my one and only absolute criticism of that book. It’s a bit late to put the info dump that one needs in the first Prefect Dreyfus book at the front of the second Prefect Dreyfus book. 
Anyway, that aside, this is a superb book that totally builds on Aurora Rising, with all our favourite characters, good and bad, and some new ones too. And it’s huge too, so huge but so unputdownable that i kept skipping my evening meditation session to keep reading this for a while longer and then staying awake a little past sleepy time too.
Excellently written, excellent characters, just excellent all round.
And up next it’s Machine Vendetta.

A quick little short, bridging the gap between
Ok, if i’m feeling like being a bit picky — and i am feeling like that — then Alastair should have written a few more short stories and novellas to give a bit/lot more info about everything Glitter Band: and not the Gary type. One begins this story with not much background to go on and we seem to muddle through quite a bit until things get to be a lot clearer. I just think that background/info-dump things could have been laid out previously and given the reader a much more enjoyable time of it.
The fifth book in the Revelation Space series, and it’s a rather good one too.
The tension against the Demarchists is building and a spy is sent to Europa to retrieve a thing from a sleeper agent. But, as with 
The third book in the Revelation Space Universe.
Some years after the events of
And so begins the super long binge read of the Revelation Space Universe. Yippee, all being well we’re going through the whole lot in chronological order.
I do enjoy stories about AI’s and such, and having previously enjoyed Stephany’s earlier book,
I do like books about Zen and i’ve read a great many throughout my life: so where does this one stack up?