Showing posts with label Greg Egan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greg Egan. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2021

Review: The Book of All Skies by Greg Egan

The journey is hard to follow, but the destination is worth it

Greg Egan has become my insta-buy author. At times, the scientific underpinnings of his worldbuilding fly over my head, but I can always trust that he's done his homework and that the whole edifice will stand. He writes in that hard SF tradition where the conflict to overcome is not interpersonal disagreement or inner turmoil but a purely technical challenge. As in a Clarke story, the universe is villain enough.

The Book of All Skies occurs in a spatially warped version of our world where two gigantic arches, known as the Hoops, serve as portals to alternate lands with different ecosystems, cultures, languages, and stars. Since this is a world without a sun, its inhabitants live in perpetual night, so they have evolved the ability to see infrared. The only sources of sustenance for living beings are starlight and geothermal energy. The Hoops themselves are not physical objects, but you can always tell where they are because the night sky visible from one side ends abruptly at a boundary where the next sky continues. Now, crucially, if you want to remain in the same land, you can always walk around a Hoop. But if you cross under it to enter the next land, you can turn around and cross it again, and enter yet another land, and repeat the procedure dozens of times. The only way to return to your point of origin is to walk back the exact same trajectory.

(If you're not a topologist and, like me, feel utterly lost, the author has posted a helpful explainer here.)

There's a narrative economy here that results in a constant state of surprise, but this technique may not suit everyone's taste. A line in the first page only makes sense if the reader can infer the mechanism of infrared vision, but otherwise, the reader is left alone. This isn't a novel that hands over explanations. The setting is absolutely alien to our common experience, but it's described from a standpoint of normalcy, which for the reader means waiting several chapters to even learn that this world has no sun, and even more chapters to realize (although it should have been obvious in hindsight) that the protagonists have no concept of years. There are infodumps, but they're restricted to points in dialogue where they're immediately relevant. If you're fine with exposition flowing organically from plot, spoken more for the actual benefit of another character than the reader's, you'll enjoy this style of writing.

The plot follows Del, an archaeologist and linguist who lives in a land at a pre-industrial stage of technological advancement, who has been recruited for an expedition to investigate one mysterious land where the ground gives way to a seemingly endless gap and no one knows whether there's more world beyond. A legend speaks of a great migration in the past, but the only pieces of evidence available are a missing book and a closed passage under the mountains. The process to reach the other side of the gap involves extensive discussions and calculations, because gravity behaves in counterintuitive ways when you cross a Hoop that has a full world on one side and only thin air on the other. No actual numbers appear in the novel (that's what the explainer page is for), although illustrations would have been very helpful. I struggled to picture the specific shape of a gigantic bridge built to cross the gap, or the trajectory of certain buoyant vehicles, or the positions of sections of rock relative to the Hoops, and after intense rereading, I'm still not sure my mental image matches Egan's.

What Del discovers at the end of her journey is not only the secret history of the fabled migration, but also the origin of the Hoops, the tragic explanation for the loss of written records, a completely different technological tradition (a discovery that underscores the relationship between scientific advancement and availability of resources), and rules for social organization she hadn't remotely suspected. However, readers must keep in mind that this is not the type of story that culminates in a big reflection on the deep truths of human life. The ending is resolved by the clever application of physics, and that's where the novel places its ambitions. The adventure in the last couple of chapters proceeds with the mechanical dryness of a Verne novel, and the text ends with unexpected abruptness in the middle of a dialogue. It does complete the thematic interests of the book, in that the ancient separation of humankind is healed, but the manner of execution can come off as ungraceful. Likewise, action scenes early in the book often pause at the strangest moments to describe a character's entire thought process, or even to insert an entire dialogue, full with meticulous strategizing, right at a moment of immediate urgency. Although this helps understand the motivations of a scene, it comes at the cost of hurting the reading flow.

Readers accustomed to a more literary vein of science fiction need to consider the text for what it aims to do and the way it sets about achieving it before jumping to find fault in these writing choices. Egan's interest in exploring strange universes is mathematical first and poetic second. That's a valid way of creating science fiction, one that has historically provided the essential link between speculation and real-life innovation, and one that needs authors like Egan in order to stay fertile.


Nerd Coefficient: 6/10.

POSTED BY: Arturo Serrano, multiclass Trekkie/Whovian/Moonie/Miraculer, accumulating experience points for still more obsessions.

Reference: Egan, Greg. The Book of All Skies [self-published, 2021].

Monday, September 10, 2018

Nanoreviews: The Skaar Invasion, Phoresis, The Expert System's Brother



Brooks, Terry. The Skaar Invasion [Del Rey]

With The Skaar Invasion, readers are in a headlong rush to the really, truly final ending of Terry Brooks' long running Shannara series. If we count the Word / Void novels (and I do), The Skaar Invasion is the 30th Shannara novel. It is the second of four volumes in The Fall of Shannara. There's a significant weight of expectation and history here. The novel mostly holds up to what it needs to do.

It is completely not fair to compare the latest novels from Terry Brooks to his earliest. Elfstones, Wishsong, and his four volume Heritage of Shannara are by far the high point of his oeuvre (though his Dark Legacy novels are the best of his later books). For a number of years now Brooks has sacrificed detail, worldbuilding, and atmosphere for a breakneck pace and quick references to the past. The Skaar Invasion, like The Black Elfstone before it, bridges that gap as best as Brooks is currently able or willing to do.

It took me all of The Black Elfstone and a decent way into The Skaar Invasion to realize the titular invasion wasn't yet another breaking of the Forbidding and a demon attack, but rather an expansion of the world (even though the action all takes place in the Four Lands. This is a fantastic decision because despite all the callbacks in this novel (Cogline, Walker Boh, Shea Ohmsford), this invasion isn't a retreading of ground Brooks has covered several times before. To make a comparison to other fantasy novels, the Skaar feel somewhat more like the Seanchan from Robert Jordan's novels or the invaders from Kameron Hurley's The Mirror Empire. The comparison is not exact, but I think it's on point. The Skaar Invasion may not be among the best of Terry Brooks, but it is a fully entertaining ride.
Score: 7/10


Egan, Greg. Phoresis [Subterranean Press]

I typically hesitate before picking up one of Greg Egan's stories. At least of the ones I've read, there is often a coldness there - as if the story is a vehicle for Egan to work out his ideas and perhaps a problem he would like to solve. They're intellectually interesting, sometimes, but I bounce off of them. That was the case early on in Phoresis, but much to my surprise - the deeper I got into Phoresis, the more I enjoyed and appreciated it.

It's a story of twin frozen worlds, one of which has inhabitants eking out lives that to call hardscrabble might be too generous. It is on that world (the names don't really matter) that a plan is made to build a tower so high that people might jump from the top and land on the other world in order to colonize it and hope for a better / easier / more stable life. Something about Egan's storytelling is compelling, even if the central conceit of the tower is a bit absurd an unwieldy. The passion and tension of the tower and the crossing the gulf between worlds is the heart of Phoresis, so long as you don't think too deeply on it. Phoresis is a three part story and multi generational. Phoresis is increasingly compelling and engaging.
Score: 7/10


Tchaikovsky, Adrian. The Expert System's Brother [Tor.com Publishing]

Our own Paul Weimer reviewed The Expert System's Brother at length over at Tor.com and one thing that Paul touched on that I appreciated is the idea of a fantasy story morphing into a science fiction one. It is perhaps the most interesting idea going on in this novella. While I'm not overly well read in Tchaikovsky's oeuvre, I have the idea that a common theme is an opening of "what the hell is going on" that has the reader working through not just figuring out the story, but also scrambling to keep up with the underpinnings of the world itself.

The ideas running through novella are interesting, about what it means to be cast out from a community and the intersection of technology with an otherwise low tech existence. There's enough packed into The Expert System's Brother that it easily could have been (and perhaps should have been) a full length novel.
Score: 6/10


POSTED BY: Joe Sherry - Co-editor of Nerds of a Feather, 2017 & 2018 Hugo Award Finalist for Best Fanzine. Minnesotan.

Monday, January 23, 2017

Nanoreviews: The Rise of Io, The Four Thousand The Eight Hundred, Everything Belongs to the Future



Chu, Wesley. The Rise of Io [Orbit, 2016]

It took a moment to really process how the change of Quasing from Tao to Io would impact the story being told, but I think it was a necessary decision. At this point, telling the story of Tao and Cameron Tan would be rehashing the original Tao trilogy as well as basically telling the story of James Bond. Io, on the other hand, is an unknown quantity as is her new host Ella Patel. The Rise of Io is as good as everything Chu has written, which is to say that it is quite good indeed. The deeper we get into the relationship between Io and Ella, the better the novel gets.
Score: 8/10



Egan, Greg. The Four Thousand, The Eight Hundred [Subterranean Press, 2016]

A question of ethics: Is it acceptable to sacrifice the lives of a relatively few number of people in exchange for securing the safety of a larger group? Or, to reverse the question: Is it acceptable to risk the lives of a larger group of people in order to save the lives of a smaller group?

A question of ethics: At what point, if you feel that injustices were done towards your ancestors, are you and your generation due reparations?

These are some of the thought experiments Greg Egan weaves through his novella The Four Thousand, The Eight Hundred. This is well done hard science fiction.
Score: 7/10




Penny, Laurie. Everything Belongs to the Future [Tor.com Publishing, 2016]

If I started this review just five days sooner, I'd have been able to write a full review.  But, I didn't, so I'll just tell you that Everything Belongs to the Future is one of my favorite of all of Tor.com Publishing's 2016 novellas. Top 5 for sure, and there were some damn good stories.  Laurie Penny's novella looks at a future where the secret to extending life has been unlocked, but it comes at a price - a very high price that only the rich can afford and everyone else is left farther and farther behind. But there are protests and opposition and betrayal and conspiracy.  We know early on that something significant occurred because the interstitials are letters from prison, but having an idea about the end does nothing to minimize the tension and intensity of the novella. Everything Belongs to the Future is stunning and simply excellent. I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Score: 9/10


POSTED BY: Joe Sherry - Writer / Editor at Adventures in Reading since 2004. Nerds of a Feather contributor since 2015, editor since 2016. Minnesotan.

Monday, November 21, 2016

New Books Spotlight

Welcome to another edition of the New Books Spotlight, where each month or so we curate a selection of 6 forthcoming books we find notable, interesting, and intriguing. It gives us the opportunity to shine a brief spotlight on some stuff we're itching to get our hands on.

What are you looking forward to? Anything you want to argue with us about? Is there something we should consider spotlighting in the future? Let us know in the comments!

Cover Art by Richard Anderson

Beaulieu, Bradley P., & Rob Ziegler. The Burning Light [Tor.com Publishing, 2016]
Publisher's Description:
Disgraced government operative Colonel Chu is exiled to the flooded relic of New York City. Something called the Light has hit the streets like an epidemic, leavings its users strung out and disconnected from the mind-network humanity relies on. Chu has lost everything she cares about to the Light. She’ll end the threat or die trying.

A former corporate pilot who controlled a thousand ships with her mind, Zola looks like just another Light-junkie living hand to mouth on the edge of society. She’s special though. As much as she needs the Light, the Light needs her too. But, Chu is getting close and Zola can’t hide forever.

The Burning Light is a thrilling and all-too believable science fiction novella from Bradley P. Beaulieu and Rob Ziegler, the authors of Twelve Kings in Sharakhai and Seed.
Why We Want It: Our very own Brian had a chance to read The Burning Light back in August and he absolutely loved it. Who are we to argue with him?


Cover Art by Daniel Dociu
Corey, James S.A. Babylon's Ashes [Orbit, 2016]
Publisher's Description:
A revolution brewing for generations has begun in fire. It will end in blood.

The Free Navy - a violent group of Belters in black-market military ships - has crippled the Earth and begun a campaign of piracy and violence among the outer planets. The colony ships heading for the thousand new worlds on the far side of the alien ring gates are easy prey, and no single navy remains strong enough to protect them.

James Holden and his crew know the strengths and weaknesses of this new force better than anyone. Outnumbered and outgunned, the embattled remnants of the old political powers call on the Rocinante for a desperate mission to reach Medina Station at the heart of the gate network.

But the new alliances are as flawed as the old, and the struggle for power has only just begun. As the chaos grows, an alien mystery deepens. Pirate fleets, mutiny, and betrayal may be the least of the Rocinante's problems. And in the uncanny spaces past the ring gates, the choices of a few damaged and desperate people may determine the fate of more than just humanity. 
Why We Want It: Babylon's Ashes is the sixth volume in The Expanse, and honestly, if you're not a fan of the first five there's nothing I can tell you that will convince you to pick this one up - but The Expanse is thrilling space opera with a sprawling cast of characters. We've been waiting for this one the moment we turned the final page of Nemesis Game.


Cover Art by Dominic Harman
Egan, Greg. The Four Thousand, The Eight Hundred [Subterranean Press, 2016]
Publisher's Description:
Camille is desperate to escape her home on colonized asteroid Vesta, journeying through space in a small cocoon pod covertly and precariously attached to a cargo ship. Anna is a newly appointed port director on asteroid Ceres, intrigued by the causes that have led so-called riders like Camille to show up at her post in search of asylum.

Conditions on Vesta are quickly deteriorating—for one group of people in particular. The original founders agreed to split profits equally, but the Sivadier syndicate contributed intellectual property rather than more valued tangible goods. Now the rest of the populace wants payback. As Camille travels closer to Ceres, it seems ever more likely that Vesta will demand the other asteroid stop harboring its fugitives.

With “The Four Thousand, the Eight Hundred,” acclaimed author Greg Egan offers up a stellar, novella-length example of hard science fiction, as human and involving as it is insightful and philosophical. 
Why We Want It: We like our novellas here at Nerds of a Feather HQ and for years Subterranean Press has been the standard bearer for publishing some of the finest limited editions around. Greg Egan's The Four Thousand, The Eight Hundred was originally published in Asimov's in late 2015 and quickly garnered heaps of praise. This release gives us another chance to discover Egan's novella.


Cover Art by Vanessa Han
Larbalestier, Justine. My Sister Rosa [Soho Teen, 2016]
Publisher's Description
What if the most terrifying person you know is your ten-year-old sister?

Seventeen-year-old Aussie Che Taylor loves his younger sister, Rosa. But he’s also certain that she’s a psychopath — clinically, threateningly, dangerously. Recently Rosa has been making trouble, hurting things. Che is the only one who knows; he’s the only one his sister trusts. Rosa is smart, talented, pretty, and very good at hiding what she is and the manipulation she’s capable of.

Their parents, whose business takes the family from place to place, brush off the warning signs as Rosa’s “acting out.” Now that they have moved again — from Bangkok to New York City — their new hometown provides far too many opportunities for Rosa to play her increasingly complex and disturbing games. Che’s always been Rosa’s rock, protecting her from the world. Now, the world might need protection from her. 
Why We Want It: The premise of My Sister Rosa is terrifying and compelling and as written by Justine Larbalestier, it is also something we expect we won't be able to look away from.


Cover Art by Anxo Amarelle CGI
Newman, Emma. After Atlas [Roc, 2016]
Publisher's Description:
Acclaimed author Emma Newman returns to the captivating universe she created in Planetfall with a stunning science fiction mystery where one man’s murder is much more than it seems…

Gov-corp detective Carlos Moreno was only a baby when Atlas left Earth to seek truth among the stars. But in that moment, the course of Carlos’s entire life changed. Atlas is what took his mother away; what made his father lose hope; what led Alejandro Casales, leader of the religious cult known as the Circle, to his door. And now, on the eve of the fortieth anniversary of Atlas’s departure, it’s got something to do why Casales was found dead in his hotel room—and why Carlos is the man in charge of the investigation.

To figure out who killed one of the most powerful men on Earth, Carlos is supposed to put aside his personal history. But the deeper he delves into the case, the more he realizes that escaping the past is not so easy. There’s more to Casales’s death than meets the eye, and something much more sinister to the legacy of Atlas than anyone realizes… 
Why We Want It: We loved Planetfall and with After Atlas, Emma Newman brings us back to that setting, though with a completely different perspective. It appears to be less a sequel than a sideways novel, but a new novel from Emma Newman is to be celebrated.


Cover Design by Lauren Panepinto
Wagers, K.B. After the Crown [Orbit, 2016]
Publisher's Description:
The adrenaline-fueled, Star Wars-style sequel to Behind the Throne, a new space adventure series from author K.B. Wagers.

Former gunrunner-turned-Empress Hail Bristol was dragged back to her home planet to fill her rightful position in the palace. With her sisters and parents murdered, the Indranan empire is on the brink of war. Hail must quickly make alliances with nearby worlds if she has any hope of surviving her rule.

When peace talks turn violent and Hail realizes she's been betrayed, she must rely on her old gunrunning ways to get out of trouble. With help from an old boss and some surprising new allies, she must risk everything to save her world. 
Why We Want It: Brian reviewed Behind the Throne back in July and despite rating the novel 7/10, was not all that impressed by it. We seldom do multiple reviews of the same book here at Nerds of a Feather, but I would have given it the same score but with heaps more praise. Behind the Throne was a fast paced romp of a novel with the feel of condensing space operate into the political sphere. After the Crown takes the next step and I can't wait to see what sort of ride Wagers takes us on next.


POSTED BY: Joe Sherry - Writer / Editor at Adventures in Reading since 2004, Nerds of a Feather contributor since 2015, editor since 2016. Minnesotan.