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Titanborn – Near Future Science Fiction – Post Disaster Corporate Control

March 8, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Rhett C. Bruno’s Titanborn imagines a world 300 years after a near-miss extinction event, when a meteorite nearly ended humanity.  His world is smaller than ours, with most people concentrated along the continental ridges and in long, strung out cities.  Most animals and plants are extinct.  A group of people escaped Earth before the meteorite strike, fled to Saturn’s large moon Titan and set up society there.

World Building and Back Story

Folks left alive on Earth adapted.  The nominal government is the USF but mega corporations hold the real power, including summary capital punishment.

Lead character Malcolm Graves is a Collector, one of the men Pervenio corporation sends out to enforce its rules – by any means necessary.  Malcolm is happy to kill or capture, whichever gives him the biggest paycheck.

Titanborn opens with Malcolm tracking down an asteroid miner with delusions of owning his own destiny and the leader of a proto union that is on strike.  Pervenio can’t have miners strike (nor people thinking they can run their own show) so send Malcolm to kill or capture the culprit.  Instead the miner leader blows out the atmospheric seal, killing himself, the Pervenio security team, and dozens of others.  Malcolm isn’t happy and his boss is even less happy and orders Malcolm on vacation.

Pervenio expanded to Titan about 100 years before the novel opens to extract gasses from Saturn’s atmosphere and use the water in the rings and on Titan.  Pervenio exploited the  original Titan colonists and the new residents brought diseases that sent many Titan dwellers into brutal quarantine where they die.  The original colonists are not happy with the situation.

The idea of a world controlled by corporations or colonists dominated by the home planet is not new, but Bruno does a good job building on these themes.  We get a sense of Titanborn’s imagined physical earth, colder and far less beautiful, crowded with people concentrated in narrow bands along maglev lines.  Author Bruno built his world economically and politically and touched lightly on social dynamics or nature.  I inferred that most Earth people were reasonably happy and content with the situation, not particularly upset by the corporate control and not concerned with much beyond today.

Characters

Unfortunately I didn’t like either of the two main characters, Malcolm Graves or Zhaff the freakish Spock-like new agent.  Malcolm cares about nothing much beyond himself and drinking.  He dreams of the big payoff he’ll get for settling the Titan problem but it’s clear he has no idea what to do with the money, no intention to leave Collecting for a peaceful life, no notion of what he wants beyond the thrill of chasing malcontents, sex and drinking.

Zhaff is a highly trained operative with little personality.  (In fact I thought the big reveal might be that he is an android.)  He wears an eye lens that connects to his nerves and calmly announces to Malcolm that he has an unusually small amygdala, the part of the brain that handles emotions.  He is there as a foil for Malcolm.

Plot

The plot is straightforward combination of shoot-em-up, detecting and betrayal.  The final twist was not a surprise, I think any reader would see that come a long way ahead, right about half way into the novel.  I didn’t feel tension or much conflict or suspense, a bit pedestrian for a science fiction story with such an interesting premise and sound background.

Summary

Malcolm tells the story first person so we experience what he does, feel what he feels.  Unfortunately, although the world building is top notch, the plot is workmanlike and the characters are unpleasant enough that I didn’t much enjoy being inside Malcolm’s head, seeing and feeling along with him.  If Bruno had created a more likable character this would be a fine novel.  As it is, I have to give it a gentleman’s C+, 3 stars.

I received an advance copy through NetGalley at no charge in exchange for an honest review.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Book Review, Science Fiction

Let’s Give a Big Welcome Back to L. E. Modesitt! Solar Express Review

January 22, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Finally, after his last 3 books that were glacially paced, with wooden dialogue and peopled by stock crews of greedy (and stupid) businessmen, corrupt (and stupid) political leaders, weak-kneed (and obtuse) co-workers,  plus one resourceful hero, Modesitt delivers a good story with interesting people, genuinely worrisome situations, awe-inspiring settings and a plot.  Welcome back!

Modesitt set Solar Express 100 years from now where not much has changed in terms of politics or people.  The US and Canada (and maybe Mexico) are now Noram; China plus unknown other countries are now the Sinese; India is a world power and Europe is one big agglomeration with strong Russian leadership.  African, Middle East, Australia and South America are smaller powers with the African/Middle East/Australian grouped into a union nominally allied with India.

Modesitt writes excellent hard science fiction, which this is, and good to excellent fantasy like the Imager series.  He has three major habits that you either need to love or be able to ignore in order to enjoy any of his books.

  • Politics with head-shaking cultural observations and wooden dialogue
  • Slow pacing
  • Rinse and repeat characters.

As usual Modesitt can’t resist declaring his political beliefs in Solar Express.  He imagines a news outlet, Hot News! that combines accurate reporting, innuendo, celebrity watching and political acumen. Hot News! stories cover global warming results, environmental havoc in polar regions, flooded cities and ravaged coasts and speculation about the Sinese intentions and the apparent inability for the Noram leaders to do anything.

The more interesting snippets are news articles and memos from the Noram government leaders that present facts that align to some Hot News! speculation with just enough to tease us readers.  I wanted to know a lot more than Modesitt gave us!

The pace varies between really slow and slow with a touch of zip-bang.  The pace fits the subject – neither pilot Chris Tavoian nor astrophysicist Alayna Wong-Grant can exactly hurry their work along – and is countered by the fast-moving Solar Express and geopolitical events.   I got a little antsy about a third through, but the Hot News! punctuated the crawling science.

One pleasant change was the characters.  Yes, we still had evil, greedy people who lust after power, but none appeared in person.  “Colonel Anson”, Chris Tavoian’s superior officer is well-meaning and effective (many Modesitt superior officers are either venal or incompentent) and the minor characters Kit and Emma are warm and interesting.  Chris and Alayna are interesting people, a bit reserved, but with feelings and interests.

Modesitt is one of the few authors who successfully write fantasy and science fiction (Bujold and Dave Weber are two others) and some of his science fiction has fantasy-seeming elements (Empress of Eternity and Hammer of Darkness).  Solar Express is unusual in being set so close to today, with technology and politics we can easily extrapolate to.  It made it easy to follow.  Even if you don’t agree with his extrapolated climate, political and cultural changes you can visual them happening.

In Solar Express Modesitt slipped in a fourth annoying habit, dumping complex geographic and political backgrounds early, explaining some later and some not at all.  For example, page 15 in one sentence he introduces:  FuxEx burners (apparently the standard shuttle/small freighter), DOEA (Department of Off Earth Affairs, a government agency charged to oversee space), Policia Espacial (never re-introduced, likely the South American security force), Sudam (South American government), magline (OK, that’s pretty easy, basically a train on the moon), ONeill Station (believe the main transship point orbiting the moon, run by Noram), the elevator (moon to space elevator), standard climber (likely a car that runs on the elevator), main station (terminus for the elevator).

The next page gives us fusionjet (similar to the FusEx?), vasimr slowboats (never explained, likely just what they sound, a s-l-o-w way to move cargo) and Hel3, otherwise known as a helium isotope.  I wouldn’t mind the dump if he gave just a bit of background first or omitted altogether if never revisited.  It is not wise to make your readers feel stupid, especially when the author’s entire body of work holds up thinking as a great virtue.

The Amazon reader reviews for Solar Express are split, about 2/3 positive and 1/3 negative and almost no 3 stars.  Modesitt in his blog attributes this to too many fantasy readers who were turned off by the science fiction aspects.  Several readers complained about the characters communicating by delayed message vs. real time in person (as they would in fantasy series).  However other readers noted the slow pace and abundant political commentary as turn offs so I think the criticism was more than reaction from disgruntled fantasy fans.

Overall, Solar Express is an excellent addition to Modesitt’s novels.  4 Stars.

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Book Review, Political Thinking, Science Fiction

Lightless – Artificial Intelligence, Spaceships and Terrorism

October 14, 2015 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I received a copy of Lightless in exchange for an honest review. I wanted to like the book but overall it left me cold.

In theory Lightless should have been good.  An advanced ship, interplanetary rebellion, suspense, good guys and bad guys, totalitarian government.  I found the story interesting and the main character, Althea, likeable at first.  About midway through the book turns plodding, unbelievable and the character loses my interest and sympathy.

The ending was particularly bad.  First it was a set up for more books (another trilogy??) which is annoying, but the plot had so many holes in it that I couldn’t take it seriously.

The System is repressive, willing to kill everyone who lives in a terraformed dome on one of the solar system moons or planets if enough of the folks in the habitat rebel or disobey.  That seems a bit much, even a ruthless government ought to be able to find a less destructive, less indiscriminate solution.

Of course the System spawns a revolutionary, the Mallt-y-Nos.  Her solution to free the outer solar system’s population from the System’s tyrrany?  Destroy the Earth.  Yes, that’s right, not only destroy government centers, but make the planet uninhabitable.  That’ll teach them all right.

Really.  Think a minute.  You have a bunch of moons, asteroids, planets that have artificial environments set up to house a few million people.  Do you really think these fragile habitats are self sufficient and will never, not in 2000 years, need something that only Earth has?  Putting aside moral questions, this “solution” makes no sense whatsoever.  It’s like the kid with the football who doesn’t take his ball home when he can’t win but instead blows up the field, the other team and his ball.

The other plot hole is even sillier.  Ananke is an advanced ship that converts chaos to usable energy (thus upturning the second law of thermodynamics) with an advanced computer.  Matthew manages to infect the ship’s computer with a virus that somehow makes it into a sentient artificial intelligence.  And he did this in just a few minutes!  The result is of course an AI that never heard of Asimov’s three laws, never learned about morality and ethics, and acts like a two year old that just happens to be all-powerful.

The characters, Althea, her ship-turned-sentient Ananke, captain Domitian, scientist Gagnon, nasty System intelligence agent and psychopath Ida Stays, plus criminals Ivan and Matthew, plus Ivan’s mom and Constance Harper (who turns out to be the Mallt-y-Nos herself), are uninteresting.  Domitian is driven by duty, Gagnon is a nonentity red shirt type.

The writing wasn’t bad, not great but better than some.  The ideas, people, setting and plot were either ridiculous or boring and the last third of the book was a chore to get through.  I won’t look for the sequel.

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Book Review, Science Fiction

Surveillance – Ghost Targets Futuristic Suspense and Crankiness

September 29, 2015 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Let’s get the crankiness over first.  Have you noticed the trend towards eliminating irregular verbs?  “Dived” instead of “dove”, “lighted” instead of “lit”, “shined” instead of “shone” and more?  I like irregular verbs.  They link our English back to its Anglo Saxon roots and it annoys me when authors don’t use them.

I’m also annoyed when authors uses the name of the Lord as a throwaway exclamation or curse.  This is wrong.

On to the book review…

Surveillance (Ghost Targets Book 1)

Surveillance is a near future suspense novel set in a world where everything is recorded and tracked.  Walk into a building?  It’s on the video record.  Speak in a public place?  Recorded, voice print identified to you and logged.  The basic system, called Hathor, handles everything and connects seamlessly to services like Hearth (housing) and Midas (finance).

The novel occurs about 20 years after the first systems were challenged on privacy grounds and after the benefits and relatively benign uses have made almost everyone accept them.  For example Katie was able to find, lease and decorate an apartment while walking out of work using the Hearth system. Most criminal trials now happen before a judge who uses the evidence collected by Jurisprudence and assembled by law enforcement into a coherent story virtually guaranteed to be accurate.

Katie Pratt is brand new to the FBI Ghost Targets group, assigned to a murder investigation on her first day.  The Ghost Targets group exists because some people have been able to ghost themselves right out of the records.  Since Jurisprudence cannot see the ghosts, the FBI team develops other methods.

Surveillance is interesting and somewhat thought provoking.  Would people really give up their privacy in exchange for great convenience and benign, almost invisible oversight?  And of course we have the perennial question.  If the watchers watch everything, who watches the watchers?

I enjoyed the idea and the plot but found the characters were a bit flat.  We never learn the connection between the murderer and his victim, why they were together.  Katie doesn’t show much personality and Martin Door, one of the original Hathor developers, is two-dimensional.

Overall this was an OK book, worth reading but not worth keeping.  I don’t plan to look for the sequels.

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Science Fiction, Suspense

Review: The Scorpion Rule by Erin Bow Excellent Science Fiction

August 7, 2015 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Visualize a world of thirsty people, a world where wars and climate have caused billions of deaths, yet there are still viable countries, technology, civilization.  In this world Canada, augmented by the Great Lakes area of the US and parts of northern Europe, is a world super power called the Pan Polar Confederacy ruled by a queen.  The United States is now several smaller countries, including the newest, Cumberland, which is roughly the Ohio River watershed, parts of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky, also with its leaders.

The countries that have water, including the Pan Polar Confederacy, are strong but constantly under threat by those who do not, like Cumberland.

Setting and Back Story

400 Years before the story begins the United Nations turned to its first and best Artificial Intelligence, Talis, created by uploading a human mind, to solve the problem of bringing peace to countries warring over water.  Talis solved the problem in a unique manner:  He used the orbital platforms to destroy several cities, then gave each country an ultimatum.  Behave or else.  To reinforce the “or else” he required that the leaders of each country sent their heir or heiress to be hostages.  If the parents’ countries went to war the children died.  If the countries tried to attack him or the hostages or refused then he’d lop off another city.

This is “making it personal” and it worked.  There were still ongoing small wars but poor countries tended to demand less and the rich (i.e., had water) countries tended to agree to reasonable requests.  The title comes from Talis’ view that the only way to keep peace was to ensure that no one could go to war without loss, just like two scorpions in a bottle.

The story opens 400 years after this with Greta, Crown Princess of the Pan Polar Confederacy, living as  Child of Peace in the 4th Precepture somewhere in the Canadian Great Plains.  Greta with the other Children of Peace in the 4th Precepture is responsible to grow and harvest the food they eat, clean their own rooms.  A former human AI runs the Precepture and there are AI spies and teachers and controllers all throughout the facility.  There is no privacy or luxury.

Greta’s country is on the brink of war over access to Lake Ontario for drinking water.  Lake Erie is already dry, leaving a slightly mucky damp spot, and Greta’s mother cannot agree to give that much water from Lake Ontario since the requested amount was above the lake’s carrying capacity.

(Some facts to put the thirst in context. Lake Ontario today discharges 262,000 cubic feet per second into the St. Lawrence River, which works out to 189,800,000 acre feet per year.  The Cumberland requested 7800 acre feet per year was over the carrying capacity of the lake.  That is a big drop in water volume.)

The plot then involves Greta, Talis, Elian the hostage from the newly formed Cumberland, and the other hostage children of Greta’s age.  The plot is interesting with a few small twists, but the novel isn’t about the plot, it about the people and about the challenge that Talis faces.  Just what do you do, or what should you do, when there are more people than water?  When people with their normal human scheming and thirst for power want more and more?   How do you keep the peace and keep individuals and countries operating decently and sustainably?

Characters

Greta is a bit of a non entity in the beginning.  She expects to die as she is nearly certain her country eill be forced into war, and she is most concerned with doing it well, acting as a Crown Princess should when it came time to walk to her death, and in the meantime studies the classics.  Elian’s arrival changes things and she begins to seek an alternative to death.

Elian is a born rebel, raised far from power but the favored grandson of the new Cumberland’s leader.  He resists the entire notion of being a hostage and is most definitely not interested in dying well.  He doesn’t want to die at all.  The other hostage children play lesser roles and are more background than primary actors.

The most interesting character is Talis, the former human turned into AI.  What will Talis do with the Cumberland’s revolt?  How will he handle the death of his oldest friend the AI called the Abbot who runs Precepture #4?  How will he deal with Greta and with Elian?

Summary

The book is riveting but when I analyze each piece, plot, characters, back story, setting, the only parts that are remarkable are the back story with Talis and the eternal question of how to maintain peace in a world full of conflict.  Somehow Erin Bow manages to make these small elements into a big story, one that will stay with me for a very long time.

I hadn’t realized until writing this review that Erin Bow also wrote Plain Kate. The stories are completely different but both dig into your heart and stay there.

I was given an advanced copy by Net Galley in exchange for an honest review.

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy, Science Fiction, YA Fantasy, YA Science Fiction

Real? Or Imitation Human?

March 7, 2014 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Too often to review a book I have to get it back open, just to look up the title. Not so with The Socket Greeny Saga by author Tony Bertauski. Mr. Bertauski told me Socket Greeny was his first fiction work, and it is excellent. I have him noted as an author to follow.

The main character is seventeen but this is not YA fiction.  Bertauski grabs your heart and does not let go.  You care about Socket Greeny.  Socket finds everything and loses it:  his family, his place in the world, his friends, his identity.  At the end you still wonder what happened and what will happen next.  The book ends but the story does not, yet there is no cliff hanger, no obvious sequel.  Instead the ending brings the loose threads together and leaves us Socket.

The Socket Greeny Saga is a trilogy that flows seamlessly from one book to the next. In fact my Nook version had no separation between the books, other than a periodic “Discovery” or “Training” or “Legend” interspersed in the text there was no way to know which book was which.

The plot is interesting, especially the first book of the trilogy, Discovery. Socket Greeny and his two friends Chute and Streeter go into Virtualmode during study hall and get into trouble. Socket inadvertently triggered a time slip that causes his Mom to pick him up from school and take him to the secret training facility for the Paladins. Paladins are humans with improved abilities, especially mental abilities, who are sworn to protect humanity.

In Books one and two Socket has to come to terms with his new abilities, learn and grow and develop mental powers.  Socket’s recurring enemies, duplicated humans that look and act just like real people, attack.  Socket is able to stop the duplicates, first with his friends and then by himself.

Book three starts with Socket, now a full Paladin, taking a wormhole trip to a remote outpost. Somehow he is kidnapped on the return trip and attacked by the real, ravenous enemy that the Paladins know nothing about.
Now Socket realizes that not only must he save the Earth and all his friends and family, he must save the universe.

The book could have gotten a bit ridiculous at this point. A seventeen year old universe saver? A ravenous enemy that kills all worlds? That can come to live with one cell? Instead the book turns inward, where we see Socket’s emotional depth when he realizes he has been betrayed and nothing is what he believed.

I loved the characters, especially Socket and the grimmets. Tony Bertauski did what too-few authors do when writing YA science fiction, and explored the inner depths of people and how they reacted to the events and threats. The story was well written, interesting and fast moving. It seems authors tend to skimp on plot or character or setting or good dialogue and writing style, but The Socket Greeny Saga had all four.

Just a few minor complaints.
The ending was ambiguous. What happens next? Socket is awake now, does he stay awake? Does he drift off again?
What about the grimmets? Did they die at the end? Or did they, and their world, survive?
Why did Socket stay sane and human when others just like him did not?
The hallucinogenic sequences during the testing and training were a bit much.

But overall, this was excellent. Tony has a generous offer in the end of the Nook version to request any free E book from him. After reading The Socket Greeny Saga you can bet I quickly took him up on his offer!

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: Book Review, Loved It!, Science Fiction, YA Fantasy Fiction, YA Science Fiction

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