I have been reading the English translations and the characters and especially their dialogues feel very fake. I do appreciate the hard science aspect of the books but the long monologues, kids speaking like middle-aged philosophers, and army personnel being one-dimensional macho men breaks the immersion for me. It has the depth of a 1980s low-budget thriller.

I don’t read a lot of hard science fiction or translations of Chinese books. I don’t know if this is genre-related.

  • PseudoMon@literature.cafe
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    1 year ago

    Not being character-driven might explain why I didn’t enjoy reading The Three-Body Problem, but in that case Dune is very character-driven by comparison! I love Dune! I find myself very attached to its characters and their relationships, both to each other and to the world at large.

    I’m on the same boat as OP on The Three Body Problem. The writing feels dry, the characters don’t feel real, and as a result I don’t really care about what happens in the story. I’ve read a few media translated from Chinese and few are as dry as Three Body. I’m not sure if the translation is just poor (I’ve heard it’s heavily edited compared to the original) or if that’s just how the original writing is.

    • MikeyMongol@literature.cafe
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      The translator is a novelist in his own right, and his Dandelion Dynasty series is quite good. It’s not the translation. I suspect it’s a combination of it being a hard-sf “ideas” book, and different national styles in novel writing.

      • PseudoMon@literature.cafe
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        Well as a translator myself, I can say translating and writing are VERY different skillsets! Entirely possible for someone to be good at writing in English but mediocre at translating to it (I am one such example 😔).

        But yes, it seems likely the different styles and SF-hardness is more to blame than the translation itself.

    • oolong@lemmings.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Oh agreed! I’m rereading Dune right now to refresh my memory before the movie later this year and I love the characters, but at the same time I understand where the criticism comes from.

      I don’t think it’s a translation problem; the second book has a different translator and if anything, the characters are even less realistic.