The actual one area where it really is quite groundbreaking is in its structure. There is no overarching storyline at all, no big conflict with a final climax. It is episodic, almost like an older TV series, except that the transitions between episodes are not as delineated. The story starts out with Rosemary, privileged young human woman from Mars who ships out on a beat-up but lovingly crewed tunneling ship. Their job is to dig the tunnels between layers of space that allow for travel between systems. Perspective jumps from crew member to crew member, each of which is a quirky individual and whose pasts give us knowledge about the universe we are in. We basically follow the ship and its crew as it moves from job to job, getting to know them and the universe better. They are ultimately setting out to do one big job that involves connecting a tunnel to a volatile species and the final chapters are about that job, but it is the people and the setting that is the throughline here, not any narrative.
This is overall a relatively reasonable and benign world. It's kind of the Scandinavia of science fiction world-building. There are conflicts and problems and politics but it seems that most people are trying to make things okay. Humans are a lesser species, saved from extinction only by the luck of one of their pilgrimage ships escaping dying earth running into a superior race of aliens. The fun here are the exotic locations and the cool side characters. This book is almost like an introduction to a tabletop RPG campaign setting put into a narrative form. There is not a lot of tension and I appreciated that. It was an easy page-turner that had me moved on several moments, a much needed tonic from some of the bad books I had to go through recently.
2 comments:
I quite enjoyed reading this book but it left little impression on me except that I kept wondering when the story would actually start, and it never did. It felt like the Café Santropol in space.
I think that's fair. I enjoyed the characters and setting enough that I didn't miss any overarching narrative. I appreciated that it was more like a series of episodes about a neat gang of space misfits from the days before prestige television. Today we are slaves to the long narrative arc.
Post a Comment