The Three-Body Problem

The Three-Body Problem

4.4 out of 5

46,179 global ratings

The inspiration for the Netflix series 3 Body Problem!

WINNER OF THE HUGO AWARD FOR BEST NOVEL

Over 1 million copies sold in North America

“A mind-bending epic.”―The New York Times • “War of the Worlds for the 21st century.”―The Wall Street Journal • “Fascinating.”―TIME • “Extraordinary.”―The New Yorker • “Wildly imaginative.”―Barack Obama • “Provocative.”―Slate • “A breakthrough book.”―George R. R. Martin • “Impossible to put down.”―GQ • “Absolutely mind-unfolding.”―NPR • “You should be reading Liu Cixin.”―The Washington Post

The Three-Body Problem is the first novel in the groundbreaking, Hugo Award-winning series from China's most beloved science fiction author, Cixin Liu.

Set against the backdrop of China's Cultural Revolution, a secret military project sends signals into space to establish contact with aliens. An alien civilization on the brink of destruction captures the signal and plans to invade Earth. Meanwhile, on Earth, different camps start forming, planning to either welcome the superior beings and help them take over a world seen as corrupt, or to fight against the invasion. The result is a science fiction masterpiece of enormous scope and vision.

The Three-Body Problem Series

  • The Three-Body Problem
  • The Dark Forest
  • Death's End

Other Books by Cixin Liu

  • Ball Lightning
  • Supernova Era
  • To Hold Up the Sky
  • The Wandering Earth
  • A View from the Stars

About the authors

Cixin Liu

Cixin Liu

Liu Cixin, born in June 1963, is a representative of the new generation of Chinese science fiction authors and recognized as a leading voice in Chinese science fiction. He was awarded the China Galaxy Science Fiction Award for eight consecutive years, from 1999 to 2006 and again in 2010. His representative work The Three-body Problem is the BEST STORY of 2015 Hugo Awards, the 3rd of 2015 Campbell Award finalists, and nominee of 2015 Nebulas Award. His works have received wide acclaim on account of their powerful atmosphere and brilliant imagination. Liu Cixin's stories successfully combine the exceedingly ephemeral with hard reality, all the while focussing on revealing the essence and aesthetics of science. He has endeavoured to create a distinctly Chinese style of science fiction. Liu Cixin is a member of the China Writers' Association and the Shanxi Writers' Association.

Read more


Reviews

Kindle Customer

Kindle Customer

5

This is a good read. It well deserves the Hugo Award that it won.

Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2024

Verified Purchase

This book is the first part of a four part Science Fiction series written by a well-known (in China) author of stories in this genre.

I read the book after having seen the Netflix six-part series based on the book. The book was much clearer on the science of the three body problem (apparently a well known problem in physics), a situation in which a planet is in a solar system that has three suns. The length of days and years is highly variable and unpredictable in this configuration, which strongly influences the development of civilization on the planet.

The book made the psychology and motivations of the characters much clearer than the Netflix series did, as well as the relationship between the characters, and the meaning of a computer game (also called Three Body Problem) that is a major vehicle for developing the backstory of the alien civilization on the aforementioned planet.

The producers of the Netflix series took a few liberties with the story in the book. At least one character male character in the book is female in the series, and some incidents are in a different order, but on the whole the series portrays the SF aspect of the book very well.

The quality of the writing is really good. I understand why the book won a Hugo award. I plan to at least begin the second volume of the trilogy. The concept of a trilogy like this is reminiscent Of Asimov's Foundation trilogy, and even Heinlein's Future History, not only because each is a series of novels and stories, but because this book is such a good read.

Read more

3 people found this helpful

Casey Dorman

Casey Dorman

5

Mind-boggling science fiction!

Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2021

Verified Purchase

Award winning Chinese science fiction author Cixin Liu has said, “Science fiction is a literature that belongs to all humankind. It portrays events of interest to all humanity, and thus science fiction should be the literary genre most accessible to readers of different nations.” I think this is true, or at least it can be. For science fiction to appeal to everyone on the planet it is necessary that its stories portray situations that are relevant to everyone, that they are written about in a way that doesn’t exclude those whose cultural or societal beliefs fall into one political camp or another, and, most of all, it requires a literate world in which everyone has enough of their basic needs met that they have time for leisure reading.

We are a long way from the ideal state described above, but some books are a movement toward it. Cixin Liu’s “The Three-Body Problem “represents a step in that direction. Liu lives in the People’s Republic of China. When I think of science fiction audiences, China doesn’t come immediately to mind, but that is because of my ignorance, not reality. “The Three-Body Problem” not only won the Hugo Award after its translation into English in 2014, but it also won China’s Galaxy Award for best science fiction in 2006, the year of its publication in China. Cixin Liu has won the Galaxy Award, which I didn’t even know existed, 9 times.

“The Three-Body Problem “is hard science fiction, meaning that it is literally filled with science, some of it real, much of it speculative with kernels of real science leading to wildly fantastic consequences. One of its themes is the overturning of the basic principles of modern physics, or at least the apparent overturning of them, since another theme is the deliberate undermining of belief in those principles. The underlying plot of the novel is the mutual discovery of another race in our galaxy, mutual in the sense that we discover them at the same time that they discover us.

The ideas contained in this novel are mind-boggling. What appears fanciful becomes less and less so, as more science behind it is revealed, although the science too, get stretched until everything seems fanciful, but I as a reader, was never sure if it was based on realistic science or not. That’s part of the entertaining quality of the book. The extraordinary discoveries come one after another, gradually unfolding the true plot that is determining the characters’ actions.

There are political criticisms in “The Three-Body Problem,” almost entirely of China’s Cultural Revolution of the 1960’s and 70’s. As such, they are a criticism of constraining science because of political or philosophical reasons. The author himself has made some political statements, almost entirely in favor of Chinese government policies, which have earned him enough suspicion in the U.S. that several Republican Congressmen objected when they heard that Netflix was creating a film version of his work. But modern Chinese politics are not an issue in the novel. Liu’s comments at the end of the English translation of the book make it clear that he hopes science fiction such as his can bring the world together.

A word about character development in “The Three-Body Problem.” The early portions of the book cover several years and skip from one character to another, many of them who die. Finally, the story settles down to a small set of regular characters. Some Western critics have complained that the characters are “shallow,” which may be valid when comparing the novel to many Western ones. I suspect that this reflects a difference between Western and Eastern cultures, as well as difference between science fiction as a genre (at least old-style science fiction) and other fiction genres. Our Western mindset is to attribute the causes of a person’s behavior to elements of their personality. They are adventurous, courageous, lazy, lackadaisical, psychopathic, etc. Sociological research has suggested that many Eastern cultures tend to see the causes of behavior as due to events and circumstance or even luck, rather than to ongoing personality characteristics (it is a more vs less difference, rather than an either-or difference). Liu’s novel takes the latter approach, giving a detailed description of the circumstances leading characters to do what they do in the novel. It is not a lack of depth of characters so much as it represents a different approach to character motivation that is reflective of the overall culture of the writer. In the case of “The Three-Body Problem,” this results in the novel gradually providing the basis for different characters’ otherwise puzzling behavior by providing after-the-fact stories of what happened in their lives to cause them to behave as they do.

I found this book to be absolutely intriguing and impossible to put down until I got to its end. I am eager to read the two novels that are its sequels. It is science fiction at its very best

Read more

148 people found this helpful

Sepharious

Sepharious

5

Incredible Hard Sci-fi

Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2024

Verified Purchase

This book is so important for the sci-fi genre. I prefer reading sci-fi, some fantasy, and political commentary from various viewpoints.

I would say that not only this book, but the rest of the trilogy contains some very dark moments and I would call it Horror-Lite, not because of what the book says in plain language, but what is left to the imagination, in a similar way to how Lovecraft did it.

But the horror element is different from what I want everyone to take away from this review, the book spans many heavy subjects in science and current theory. There is a group of great characters to follow, but the time frames explored during this series are so expansive that you say goodbye to some characters and others are introduced.

Another thing I loved about this book and the reason for the 5th star on this review, is the format, using exerpts from the future looking back at events and the way the chapters are laid out talking about certain times in certain eras. There is a clear timeline located near the beginning of each book so you can see what they are called, when each one started and ended.

It is a fantastic story and highly recommend it!

Read more

Nick

Nick

4

Compelling

Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2024

Verified Purchase

Decided to read this after watching the series that was released on Netflix, so I already knew the general story coming into it. I think if you liked watching the series, definitely check out the book.

It wastes no time in getting right into the thick of things, the pacing is truly superb, there are no dull moments from start to finish. I think it is less character focused and emotional than the Netflix adaptation, Ye is a big focus and we get her backstory here but not much for Wang Miao or anyone else. There is one scene with Wang's wife and kid but even there they are more just in the background, then we don't hear about them for the rest of the story.

The book does spend more time in diving into the science behind things going on though which is interesting, also details a divide in the group that want the Trisolarans to come to Earth.

Overall, I enjoyed reading it and I have ordered the next two books to find out what happens next.

Read more

Doug B.

Doug B.

3

Around and Around We Go…

Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2024

Verified Purchase

sigh Yes, my judgment is clouded by the fact that here is yet another shining example of an author stretching out what could- and should, imho- have been one book simply to profit from the sales of a trilogy, and why not? The internet and TV have become so packed with ads, including once-excepted FM radio, that it’s beyond tragic or laughable, so why would anyone write succinctly when few care about such anachronistic notions, especially when bloatware is more profitable and in fashion?

As to the rather convoluted plot and questionable characterization, I submit that if an bunch of aliens had swooped down fifty or sixty years ago and demanded that we subject ourselves to this kind of abuse, and further demanded that we pollute, overpopulate, and otherwise irrevocably damage our only planet, we probably would have fought them off tooth and nail, down to the last human standing.

Or would we?

Read more

2 people found this helpful