Dark Eden

English language

Published May 12, 2014

ISBN:
978-0-8041-3868-0
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3 stars (4 reviews)

Dark Eden is a social science fiction novel by British author Chris Beckett, first published in the United Kingdom in 2012. The novel explores the disintegration of a small group of a highly inbred people, descendants of two individuals whose spaceship crashed on a rogue planet they call Eden. It is the first in the Eden trilogy, followed by Mother of Eden and Daughter of Eden. The book won the Arthur C. Clarke Award for best science fiction novel published in the United Kingdom in 2012.

2 editions

Review of 'Dark Eden' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This SF novel leaves me feeling kind of conflicted. I overall enjoyed reading it, but it also frustrated the heck out of me. The story is set on the planet Eden where a human colony has existed for over 160 years. Apparently three dudes stole a spaceship, were chased by the Earth Police and crash-landed on Eden. Three dudes then went back to earth, leaving two people behind, Angela and Tommy. The colony are descendants of those two, waiting for a rescue troop from Earth to pick them up. The society has devolved into hunter gatherers on a planet that is inherently ill-suited to serve as home for humans. The planet is far away from the sun, so the only illumination are lumiscent flowers and trees. As their society is also inherently incestuous (the original couple had like 4 daughters and one son. Do the math), there are mutations, so …

Review of 'Dark Eden' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Despite a great premise, this whole book feels awkward and undercommitted. Emma Donoghue’s Room and Will Self’s The Book of Dave had the courage to fully commit to telling their stories in a broken English style, but this applied it so inconsistently as to make it jarring as fuck. And then the whole thing abruptly ends just as soon as it starts to get interesting. I had to check to see if my Kindle edition was missing a final couple of chapters (it’s not). In media res is a great place to start a story. Unfortunately for Dark Eden, it’s not such a great place to finish.