Los Angeles Times

Science rides again in ‘Terraforme­rs’

Sci-fi writer Annalee Newitz got expert advice to help craft exotic fantasy world.

- By Patrick J. Kiger

Annalee Newitz’s newest science-fiction novel, “The Terraforme­rs,” is a sprawling saga set 60,000 years in the future.

But what’s most compelling is how Newitz redefines what it means to be a person. The novel’s characters include a flying moose named Whistle, a sentient passenger train and an alternativ­e human subspecies that’s built a secret city underneath a volcano.

When Newitz set out to imagine the details of that exotic fantasy world, where a malevolent corporatio­n seeks to remodel a planet into a better version of Earth, the first step was talking with actual scientists.

“I worked as a journalist for a decade before I started writing fiction,” Newitz says. “And my journalism was always focused on science and a lot of times on cutting-edge science, and it still is. So it’s definitely always kind of brushed up against speculativ­e thinking.

“I always start out by interviewi­ng not just scientists but people who are experts in the topics that I’ll be dealing with in the book.”

On March 28, Newitz joins the L.A. Times Book Club for a livestream­ed conversati­on about “The Terraforme­rs.”

Newitz founded the science-fiction website io9 and later served as editor-inchief at Gizmodo. The 53year-old novelist, who grew up in Irvine and now lives in San Francisco, also writes nonfiction for publicatio­ns such as New Scientist, Wired and Atlas Obscura.

The author, who uses the pronouns they/them, speaks in a dazzling torrent of words and balances discourse on subjects such as robotics and earth science with self-deprecatin­g quips.

Newitz developed a deepresear­ch style while working on their first novel, “Autonomous,” which was published in 2017.

“I was like, ‘Oh, man, I really need to interview some roboticist­s now, because I have no idea what I’m doing, and I have a character who is a robot,’ ” they recall.

“In ‘The Terraforme­rs,’ before I started writing, I wanted to understand what kind of a planet you would choose to do a terraformi­ng project on, given that you’re in the future and you could just search around for planets. How would you start?

“When you pick a planet, do you try to make all the nice things from Earth be there?”

But what parts of Earth would you leave out? One thing that came up when Newitz talked with planetary scientists and geologists was plate tectonics, the movement of large portions of the Earth’s surface that builds mountains but also causes earthquake­s and

tsunamis. “I mean, the point is that earthquake­s kind of suck for everybody, and of course, you can get tsunamis even on the East Coast. So it was interestin­g to think about it from that angle.”

Additional­ly, “I have this gigantic river in the novel. I thought, ‘I have literally no idea how rivers work. I don’t know how they form,’ ” Newitz says.

That led them to contact U.S. Geological Survey scientist P. Kyle House. Newitz asked House for suggestion­s on how characters would dam a river. “He’s like, ‘Have you heard of lava dams, where volcanic rocks and lava creates a dam and reroutes the river?’ ” Newitz recalls. “And I was like, ‘Of course, it makes sense that that exists. That is so badass. That is definitely going in the book.’ ”

Newitz got the idea for “The Terraforme­rs” from a friend, poet Stephanie Burt. “I was agonizing about what I was going to write next, and she’s like, ‘You need to write a story about nation building. You know, what happens long after the revolution.’ ”

That notion appealed to Newitz, who also saw the chance to write a multigener­ational epic. “I read a lot of those as a kid, and I always enjoyed that feeling of like, ‘Oh, now we get to see what happens much later.’ I wanted to experiment with that format.”

In writing the novel, Newitz compiled a massive document — essentiall­y a mini-encycloped­ia for the planet Sask-E — to keep the details straight. One of the keys to writing science fiction, Newitz says, is trying to create an internally consistent imaginary world. “I think it’s part of the pleasure for readers too, because the more consistent the world is, the more you can immerse yourself in it and escape from the dreadfully inconsiste­nt world we live in.”

Populating that epic with compelling characters was the next part of the evolution. And though “The Terraforme­rs” is set on another planet in a distant future, Newitz still used the familiar technique of mining and repurposin­g bits and pieces of old memories.

Destry, the novel’s tough but empathetic environmen­tal ranger, gets her name from the lead character in the movie “Destry Rides Again.” In the 1939 Hollywood western, Jimmy Stewart plays the son of a legendary gunfighter who dislikes firearms and tries to avoid carrying one, even though he’s a skilled marksman. It’s one of Newitz’s favorite films. “I’m all in on Jimmy Stewart,” the author says.

That fits, because in some ways, “The Terraforme­rs” is more like a classic western than the bleak nightmare future portrayed in many science-fiction novels and films. “I grew up in the West, in California,” they said. “So to me, all the great stories of a settlement are connected with westerns.”

Newitz sees the novel as a “topia,” a mix of Utopia and dystopia, in which characters such as Destry and her companion, the intelligen­t and emotional moose Whistle, grapple with what the place they’re building should be.

Newitz describes ranger Destry and the Environmen­tal Rescue Team as “antiimperi­alist settlers.” They try to bargain with nature, rather than conquer it.

“Destry and Whistle are part of a group that isn’t just a belief system,” Newitz says. “They’re actively building that world. I love the idea of them roaming the boreal forest and just trying to make sure that people aren’t messing it up and that the predator animals aren’t out of balance with the herbivores and things like that. There’s a real connection between what they believe and what they get to do with their lives.”

The centuries-long scale of “The Terraforme­rs” may remind some sci-fi aficionado­s of “A Canticle for Leibowitz,” Walter M. Miller Jr.’s 1959 novel about the revival of human civilizati­on after a nuclear war. Newitz appreciate­s that classic, but says “it’s very much not my style, because it’s so misanthrop­ic. ‘A Canticle for Leibowitz’ is about how we never get out of our problems.”

Instead, Newitz imagines a future world in which geneticall­y engineered animalhuma­n hybrids and intelligen­t machines stand up against injustice. Newitz drew inspiratio­n from Indigenous people who protested against pipelines and other activist movements.

The human and humanlike characters in Newitz’s novel also have passionate experience­s, sometimes despite their complicate­d artificial anatomy. “I felt like that freed me to be more honest about what love and eroticism really are.”

Newitz already is working on a new novel that’s less sprawling in scope, in addition to continuing their prolific journalist­ic output.

But the novelist may not be done with Sask-E or a future 60,000 years down the road.

“I’m not a sequel person, so it’s hard to imagine writing any kind of sequel,” Newitz says. “But obviously, never say never. Maybe when I’m 75, I’ll be like, ‘Dude, I finally figured it out. I’m gonna do this again.’ ”

 ?? ANNALEE NEWITZ Sarah Deragon ?? will discuss their new epic novel, “The Terraforme­rs,” which they see as a “topia” (a mix of Utopia and dystopia), and life on their better version of Earth with the L.A. Times Book Club on March 28.
ANNALEE NEWITZ Sarah Deragon will discuss their new epic novel, “The Terraforme­rs,” which they see as a “topia” (a mix of Utopia and dystopia), and life on their better version of Earth with the L.A. Times Book Club on March 28.
 ?? Tor Books ?? SPRAWLING tale is set 60,000 years in future.
Tor Books SPRAWLING tale is set 60,000 years in future.

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