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DECIPHER

Small print, big picture. Pavlou’s masterpiece doesn’t let us off easy.

Spellbinding mainstream science-fiction spectacular.

The London-based Pavlou’s polymath debut wears five years of research in several disciplines. It turns on sunspots and a casting off of the sun’s coronal shield every 12,000 years, which causes vast devastation here. In 2012, new gravitational centers are found under Antarctica, the Arctic, the Amazon, Cairo, and Wupu, in China, pointing to an electromagnetic buildup that may combine with gravity waves hurtling from the sun—or defend us from them. Discovered at the same time is C60, a manmade form of carbon fabulously harder than diamond. American oil riggers for Rola Corp. in Antarctica have broken through an undersea wall that clearly belongs to a sunken city, one corresponding to Atlantis. Crystallized chunks of C60 come up the pipe and bear pre-cuneiform lettering: language older than the oldest known Sumerian cuneiform, almost certainly from a lost civilization. But how could there be a whole wall of C60 when the entire amount of C60 made by man amounts to a very expensive pinhead? Lost civilizations other than Atlantis, including the Zoroastrian and Aztec, loom large in Pavlou. After discoveries in Wupu, the Chinese are as interested in C60 as the Americans are, and war hovers over the massive undersea store in Antarctica. We follow Rola Corp. teams of scientists at three of the gravity spots and visit the three-mile-long CERN atom smasher outside Geneva, where a piece of the crystal is bombarded and analyzed. Meanwhile, Dr. Richard Scott, a linguist/cultural anthropologist/epigraphist who spends years deciphering ancient inscriptions, is brought in to decipher the Atlantis lettering, and we are treated to long discourses on world languages. Also on hand is Dr. Jon Hackett, a specialist in complexity theory, who gives us complexity workouts. The female leads: Scott’s 19-year-old assistant, November Dryden, and tough-talking geologist Sarah Kelsey, who discovers immense tunnels and other marvels under the Sphinx and Great Pyramid.

Small print, big picture. Pavlou’s masterpiece doesn’t let us off easy.

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2002

ISBN: 0-312-28075-0

Page Count: 400

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2002

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A MEMORY CALLED EMPIRE

A confident beginning with the promise of future installments that can’t come quickly enough.

A scholar of Byzantine history brings all her knowledge of intricate political maneuvering to bear in her debut space opera.

The fiercely independent space station of Lsel conserves the knowledge of its small population by recording the memory and personality of every valuable citizen in an imago machine and implanting it in a psychologically compatible person, melding the two personas into one. When the powerful empire of Teixcalaan demands a new ambassador, Lsel sends Mahit Dzmare, hastily integrated with an imago the current ambassador, Yskandr Aghavn, left behind on his last visit home, 15 years ago. Once arrived at the Empire’s capital city-planet, the Jewel of the World, Mahit faces the double loss of Yskandr: Sabotage by her own people destroys the younger Yskandr copy within her, and she learns that the older original was murdered a few months ago. Bereft of the experienced knowledge of her predecessor, she will have to rely on all she knows of the sophisticated and complex Teixcalaanli society as she struggles to trace the actions that led Yskandr to his tragic end and to ensure Lsel’s safety during a fierce and multistranded battle for the imperial succession. Martine offers a fascinating depiction of a civilization that uses poetry and literary allusion as propaganda and whose citizens bear lovely and sometimes-humorous names like Three Seagrass, Five Portico, and Six Helicopter but that can kill with a flower and possesses the military power to impose its delicately and dangerously mannered society across the galaxy. Love and sex are an integral aspect of and a thing apart from the nuanced and dangerous politicking. This is both an epic and a human story, successful in the mode of Ann Leckie and Yoon Ha Lee.

A confident beginning with the promise of future installments that can’t come quickly enough.

Pub Date: March 26, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-250-18643-0

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Jan. 20, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2019

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CRUSH THE KING

From the Crown of Shards series

A disappointing conclusion to a series that certainly wants to be epic and edgy but only manages to settle into its own ruts.

Estep concludes her Crown of Shards trilogy (Protect the Prince, 2019, etc.) with a young warrior queen's long-delayed vengeance.

When the murder of Bellona's royal family set Evie on the path to claim the throne herself, she swore to kill the man responsible: evil King Maximus, of neighboring Morta. Now, after forming some alliances, she's ready for the task, as well as ready to keep fending off yet more attempts on her life. As in the previous books, the task of fighting magical assassins is made easier by Evie's unbeatable secret power of simply being immune to magic. Evie and her friends, the members of her former gladiator troupe, travel to the Regalia, a tournament of skill, with plans to use the festivities to confront and defeat Maximus—a villain so over-the-top in his sadism and arrogance that he's hard to take seriously. It's hard to take any of the threats Evie faces seriously either: Whether it's hordes of assassins, a magical tidal wave, or the supposed unmatched arcane power of Maximus himself, Evie's trump card—her magical immunity—continues to save the day. It's sadly predictable, as is the plot itself; the finale is telegraphed early on, and a supposed twist at the end is nonsensical. The supporting cast suffers, too: Lucas Sullivan, Evie's lover who drove much of Book 2, does nothing here but gaze at Evie with alternating lust or worry; Paloma, Evie's bodyguard, gets a potentially interesting subplot...that is resolved completely off-page. The endless descriptions of parties, dresses, attractive people—and the constant narrative claims that our heroine is supposedly good at intrigue—just add to the sense that we've been here before.

A disappointing conclusion to a series that certainly wants to be epic and edgy but only manages to settle into its own ruts.

Pub Date: March 17, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-06-279769-8

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Harper Voyager

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2020

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