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DARK ARARAT

Remarkable and persuasive biological speculations framed by an intriguing human setup: despite the heavy-ish exposition and...

Addition to Stableford’s expanding future history (The Cassandra Complex, 2001, etc.). Starship Hope took 700 years to reach a habitable planet 58 light-years from Earth, during which time the ship’s multigenerational crew watched over colonists preserved in suspended animation. Recently, however, a revolution has occurred. The crew’s present generation is determined to wake all the colonists and ship them down to the planet as quickly as possible before departing to seek other habitable worlds. But the planet’s purple bioforms do not contain DNA; they’re part animal, part plant, often poisonous, and have no recognizable species—they don’t even have sex! The colonists already down on the planet cannot agree whether humans can adapt to this world—especially when explorers discover a huge abandoned city in the purple-glass jungle. Are these intelligent natives extinct? If not, so goes the argument, should humans attempt to colonize their world? Another complication: one of the researchers exploring the abandoned city, ecologist Bernal Delgado, has been murdered. To this confusing situation wake Matthew Fleury, prophet, broadcaster and Delgado’s replacement, and policeman Vince Solari. Once they arrive at the research outpost, Vince contemplates seven suspects, none of whom shows any interest in identifying the murderer in their midst. Matthew struggles to understand the planet’s “serial chimeras” with their highly complex genetic code, plastic morphology, and constantly shifting genetic relationships, not to mention Delgado’s cryptic notes and the alien artifacts he discovered, among which is the glass spearhead that killed him.

Remarkable and persuasive biological speculations framed by an intriguing human setup: despite the heavy-ish exposition and deliberate pace, this is topnotch intellectual science fiction.

Pub Date: March 1, 2001

ISBN: 0-765-30168-7

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2002

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A BROKEN QUEEN

From the Nine Realms series , Vol. 3

Imperfect, but well constructed and engrossing nonetheless.

Cerúlia recovers from her wounds and decides it’s finally time to take back her throne in Kozloff’s (The Queen of Raiders, 2020, etc.) penultimate Nine Realms novel.

Badly burned and laid up in a Healing Center, Cerúlia is losing faith in herself. She misses the various friends she’s made along her journey, misses her home, and resents her limitations as she heals from injuries sustained in the previous novel. In the past, her magical “Talent” for talking to animals has helped her make friends with local creatures, but she’s worried that something has happened to her ability and fears using it. As she slowly recuperates and learns from the fellow residents in the healing center, Cerúlia comes to understand that she must face her responsibility to her people and find a way to become the Queen of Weirandale. To that end, she returns home to her nation’s capital, Cascada, only to discover that her long-lost foster sister, Percia, is about to marry the kindly son of the maniacal and power-hungry Regent Matwyck, the very person keeping Cerúlia from her throne. Reunited with her beloved foster family, Cerúlia decides it is time to stop hiding under aliases and disguises. But with no army to support her, how is she supposed to save herself from Matwyck’s clutches? And now that she’s seen more of the world and understands the lives of regular people, does she even believe in the idea of monarchy at all? Kozloff finally brings the action back to Weirandale in a compelling setup to the last novel in her series. Like Book 2, this one struggles a bit with standing on its own, but Kozloff uses these pages to make Cerúlia a more complex and compelling character. Threads following other characters from other nations are easy to follow and add dimension to the world, but as of now they still feel a bit too detached from the main plotline.

Imperfect, but well constructed and engrossing nonetheless.

Pub Date: March 24, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-16866-5

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2020

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DOCILE

An engrossing and fast-paced read that doesn’t hit the mark it aims for.

The relationship between a young debtor and the trillionaire who owns him serves as a parable for the ills of capitalism.

Debut novelist Szpara imagines an only slightly more dystopian United States than the one that exists today, in which the wealth gap has grown so large that the country is more or less split into trillionaires and debtors. Debtors inherit their family's debt, increasing it exponentially over time. To pay it off, many sign up to become slaves for a predetermined amount of time, with the “choice” to inject a drug called Dociline that turns them into a kind of blissful zombie who has no memory, pain, or agency for the duration of their term. The drug is supposed to wear off within two weeks, but when Elisha Wilder’s mother returned from her debt-paying term, it never did, leaving her docile indefinitely. To resolve the rest of his family’s debt, Elisha becomes a Docile to none other than Alex Bishop, the CEO of the company that manufactures Dociline. He invokes his right to refuse the drug, one of the only Dociles ever to do so. Alex enacts a horrifying period of brainwashing in order to modify Elisha’s behavior to mimic that of an “on-med.” The resulting relationship between them is disturbing. As Alex wakes up to his complicity in a broken system—“I am Dr. Frankenstein and I’ve fallen in love with my own monster”—he becomes more sympathetic, for better or worse. As Elisha suffers not only brainwashing, rape, and abuse, but the recovery that must come after, his love for—fixation with, dependence on—Alex poses interesting questions about consent: “Being my own person hurts too much….Why should an opportunity hurt so much?” However, despite excellent pacing and a gripping narrative, Szpara fails to address the history of slavery in America—a history that is race-based and continues to shape the nation. This is a story with fully realized queer characters that is unafraid to ask complicated questions; as a parable, it functions well. But without addressing this important aspect of the nation and economic structures within which it takes place, it cannot succeed in its takedown of oppressive systems.

An engrossing and fast-paced read that doesn’t hit the mark it aims for.

Pub Date: March 3, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-21615-1

Page Count: 496

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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