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Paul Melko

Author of The Walls of the Universe

22+ Works 647 Members 27 Reviews 1 Favorited

Series

Works by Paul Melko

Associated Works

The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-First Annual Collection (2004) — Contributor — 542 copies, 6 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Second Annual Collection (2005) — Contributor — 538 copies, 11 reviews
Other Worlds Than These (2012) — Contributor — 248 copies, 5 reviews
Live Without a Net (2003) — Contributor — 143 copies, 3 reviews
Futureshocks (2006) — Contributor — 80 copies, 2 reviews
The Best of Talebones (2010) — Contributor — 8 copies
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet No. 15 (2013) — Contributor — 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Melko, Paul
Legal name
Melko, Paul J.
Birthdate
1968-05-22
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Athens, Ohio, USA
Places of residence
Athens, Ohio, USA
Education
University of Cincinnati (BS|Nuclear Engineering)
University of Michigan (MS|Nuclear Engineering)
Ohio State University (MBA)
Occupations
IT Strategist
IT consultant
Nuclear engineer
Organizations
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
Short biography
Paul is a science fiction author, whose first novel Singularity's Ring was published in February of 2008. His next novel, Walls of the Universe, will be released in February of 2009 and is based on his Hugo-, Nebula-, and Sturgeon-nominated novella, "The Walls of the Universe." He lives in Ohio with his wife and four children. He is an active member of SFWA, representing the South-Central region of the U.S. on the SFWA board of directors and chairing the Grievance Committee.

Members

Reviews

this book was really a 4, but i can't list it with the other books i've rated as a 4 because, despite a couple frank references to sex, it's basically a juvenile. juvenile as in Heinlein's juveniles (good, by a good author), but also limited in scope.
 
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hominid-gmail.com | 17 other reviews | Sep 26, 2024 |
Calling the Walls of the Universe Science-Fiction is only a technical truth, in reality the books science-fiction element are few and widely separated by most of the book. The premise for Wall of the Universe is a that a boy,john, is given a device that permits the travel between alternate universes. This concept is largely tWotU's only Sci-Fi element, still its a wonderful idea that promises many interesting worlds colored with humor and peril. What the author gives us instead boils down to three of four of the same conversation, in sundry alternate existences, and a sequence of flash journeys where he just tells you the protagonist jumped through world; albeit these jumps take place in a despairing flight, but still. That is the majority of tWotU's Sci-fi, there's a little more universe jumping at the climax, which treads toward spoiler territory, and some exposition concerning the state of all universes as a whole.
After this wee bit of Sci-fi, tWotU devolves into a book about the building of a life, with john trying to find a place in his new universe, the teleporting device being broken, and struggling through a patent war over pinball, which he confiscated from his original universe. Meanwhile his double, who original gave john the device, proceeds to make himself at home in John's original universe. What follows is another life story, involving teen pregnancies and failed patents, that is only briefly enlivened by an act of manslaughter, and i mean briefly. The manslaughter story arch consumes about three chapters and then fades away without actual resolution. This is the extent, and vast majority, of tWotU's story.
As for the characters, they are basic, predictable, uninteresting, and quite often asinine. While there are characters you like, mostly because there is a lack of unappealing traits, there are none you enjoy to read about, explore, or take the journey through tWotU with.
Finally we have the prose. The prose is weak, possibly analogous in quality to tWotU's Sci-fi, and relies heavily on telling. The dialogue is comparable to the characters, and adds no life to them; there is nothing in any sequence of dialogue for any character the differentiates that character from any other.
simply said, there are much better Science-Fiction novels, and life stories/literature, out there than tWotU; I suggest you go read those instead.
… (more)
 
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TristenKozinski | 17 other reviews | Sep 18, 2024 |
While the story is well written and the premise is an interesting one, I had real difficulty relating with the protagonists, as I found a number of their decisions and actions to be rather abhorrent. I can appreciate the literary skill of the author, but I don't know that I will read anything else by him.
 
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shadrachanki | 17 other reviews | Jun 8, 2018 |
One John was a complete dickhead at the beginning and ended up maturing into a better man.

Another John was a naive farmboy who grew into a very smart and capable man.

Both stories are a side of a multisided coin and it is quite the coin!
 
Flagged
BookstoogeLT | 17 other reviews | Dec 10, 2016 |

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Statistics

Works
22
Also by
8
Members
647
Popularity
#39,006
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
27
ISBNs
16
Languages
3
Favorited
1

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