And finally, we reached the last book (chronologically) in the series. Foundation will be a success, the ideal seed will be the new empire? What few more tests and obstacles have to be heterogeneous heroes of the beloved foundation before reaching your goal?
Unfortunately, none of these questions will be answered in the book. If we had hoped readers is a conclusion to the saga that takes brewing for some time, we can further imagine from the ideas that have the characters of the novels.
Warning, major spoilers about Foundation's saga
Instead of advancing this novel, and back on the last (reviewed in this blog) and orbits around it. Did you choose Golan Trevize correctly? Is Gaia really the best solution for the universe? With these questions in mind, the protagonists of the previous novel travel from world to world, reflecting on the adventures that occur as they seek the Earth, not really a reason. The Earth acts Deus ex machina here: it is important to Golan Trevize and his dilemma, but the protagonist himself admits he does not know why. It seems that the author could not think of a firm reason to gather Daneel with the protagonists.
Honestly, the character development peaked in the previous novel. In this, disputes aimlessly, and rejection of Golan at its option, delay the story and reflection, leaving the book in an boring space opera rather than a cataclysmic conclusion space, which is what you would expect from this saga.
Unfortunately, none of these questions will be answered in the book. If we had hoped readers is a conclusion to the saga that takes brewing for some time, we can further imagine from the ideas that have the characters of the novels.
Warning, major spoilers about Foundation's saga
Instead of advancing this novel, and back on the last (reviewed in this blog) and orbits around it. Did you choose Golan Trevize correctly? Is Gaia really the best solution for the universe? With these questions in mind, the protagonists of the previous novel travel from world to world, reflecting on the adventures that occur as they seek the Earth, not really a reason. The Earth acts Deus ex machina here: it is important to Golan Trevize and his dilemma, but the protagonist himself admits he does not know why. It seems that the author could not think of a firm reason to gather Daneel with the protagonists.
Honestly, the character development peaked in the previous novel. In this, disputes aimlessly, and rejection of Golan at its option, delay the story and reflection, leaving the book in an boring space opera rather than a cataclysmic conclusion space, which is what you would expect from this saga.