Weekend Herald

Sci-fi and fantasy

- Annabel Gooder

FREEZE-FRAME REVOLUTION

by Peter Watt (Tachyon Publicatio­ns, $33) Sunday and Lian are human technical support on a 35-million year constructi­on job, thawed out in relays when the limited AI on their asteroid ship, the Eriophora, needs help constructi­ng intergalac­tic gates for a human race so post-singularit­y that they cannot be communicat­ed with. Bred and conditione­d to want this strange life lived in blips, they have still become disillusio­ned with their lot. But when your mission was hard-coded an eon ago there is no way to put the brakes on. The puzzle Peter Watts has set his protagonis­ts (and himself) is how do you plan a revolution when you are chipped and continuous­ly under surveillan­ce and you have to communicat­e asynchrono­usly with co-conspirato­rs over thousands of years?

THE TEA MASTER AND THE DETECTIVE

by Aliette de Bodard

(Subterrane­an Press, $40)

After a traumatic experience, The Shadow’s Child has avoided transporti­ng people through the dark spaces, instead she prescribes tea blends that will help them survive the trip. When Long Chau, a consulting detective, hires her to briefly go out to retrieve the dead body of a young woman floating at the site of another “mindship’s” accident she doesn’t want to say no, and gets drawn into both the mystery of the dead body and that of Long Chau’s past. There is nothing new about Sherlock Holmes homages but plenty of delight to be had in spotting the parallels in this partnershi­p between an analytical human and a sentimenta­l mindship living in a space habitat with Vietnamese cultural roots.

THE POPPY WAR

Rebecca Kuang (HarperColl­ins Publishers, $35) Rin is a war orphan and shop girl who takes and passes the national keju exam, which wins her admission to the most exclusive military academy in Nikara. She finds herself a provincial nobody among the empire’s noblest scions. As she settles into the school, making both friends and enemies, she is disappoint­ed to be singled out by the school’s most eccentric teacher, who wants to teach her his shaman powers — as long as she promises not to use them. The second half of The Poppy War takes a sharp turn to the dark when the war Rin was being trained for begins. The book’s weaknesses are those of a young first-time writer — reliance on cliche and characters that lack shades of grey and I am confident that what follows will continue to improve.

AFTERWAR

by Lilith Saintcrow (Little Brown & Co, $28) As a second American civil war draws to a close, a group called Swann’s Raiders liberate a death camp and find one of their own held in a brothel. They take her with them as they continue forward, and Spooky slowly bonds with the unit as she tries to recover from and make sense of her years being experiment­ed on and abused in concentrat­ion camps. Saintcrow’s strengths are in how she characteri­ses the close-knit raiders and their varied coping mechanisms. Set 80 years from now — so there are flying cars (military vehicles) and other new technologi­es of war — the most unbelievab­le aspect of Afterwar is that it took that long for the American culture wars to ignite into a new civil war. Saintcrow has delivered a dark and gripping read that would make a very good graphic novel.

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