An isolated, sunless planet faces challenges in another adjunct to the Imperial Radch trilogy.
Readers of those books will remember that the battle among various factions of Radchaai ruler Anaander Mianaai destroyed several gates that made it possible to travel across vast distances in space. This novel explores the ramifications of that action on the remote and frozen planet of Aaa, which still chafes under the Radchaai occupiers who annexed it 30 years ago. Aaa’s precarious food supply chain is disrupted when information and ships stop showing up. Key imports cease to be available and local food sources begin to run out in an atmosphere of religious and social unrest heightened by a wealthy man’s desire to become a saint. Many people consider Serque Tais unworthy of this ascension, which involves several weeks of fasting and drug-induced contemplation and ends with a fatal poison that permanently preserves the body as a sacred relic—and as a focus for fresh offerings to the temple. Tais’ decision to leave his property and business to his grandchild Elerit makes his feckless son rather unhappy. Meanwhile, Speaking Savant Keemat, the popular cleric whose vision endorsed Tais’ sainthood, clashes with the social-climbing hierarch of their order and begins to wonder if the vision was actually intended for Keemat themselves. Plus, a young man unwillingly sold into servitude on a distant planet instead finds himself pressed into service at home, attending the physically and emotionally injured cousin of the Radchaai governor. A nearly omniscient narrator from several centuries in the future explains how these storylines converge, but never explains the injured cousin’s backstory, which seems like it’s going to be important but never pans out. What the narrator does do is examine the complex, volatile enmeshment of religious and secular matters (something with obvious contemporary relevance), obligations between parents and children, whether a person can make their own destiny despite societal pressures, the impact of small choices in a wider world, and the ripples of larger choices in an even wider galaxy.
A skillfully rendered, thoughtful offshoot of the original story.