
The Three-Body Problem
by Liu Cixin
Editorial review
The first volume of Liu Cixin's 'Remembrance of Earth's Past' trilogy is the most influential Chinese science-fiction novel ever translated into English. Its imaginative scale is staggering, and its opening Cultural Revolution sequence is some of the strongest writing in the genre.
AI-generated summary
Beginning during China's Cultural Revolution and reaching across light-years, the novel follows astrophysicists, intelligence officials, and one bitter scientist whose decision in the 1960s sets in motion humanity's first contact with an alien civilization.
Key takeaways
- 1
Physics, politics, and personal trauma can be threads of the same plot.
- 2
First contact is unlikely to be cuddly.
- 3
Civilizational distrust scales unforgivingly across light-years.
- 4
Hard science fiction can carry serious philosophical weight.
The right reader
Readers ready for a wide-screen, scientifically-engaged trilogy. The first book stands alone; most readers continue.
What it touches
How it reads
Cerebral, wide-screen, austere.
Reading difficulty: Challenging

