Thursday, December 29, 2022

The Missing of Clairdelune

Christelle Dabos

Book 2 of The Mirror Visitor Quartet

Ophelia is on the Pole, and is presented at court. Yet she clearly has not found love with her betrothed, and the majority of her time is spent staying alive on this strange ark. It is particularly difficult since the dominant power here is illusion, and her fiance is the treasurer (basically hated by everyone). Add to this the fact that she is getting anonymous death threats from GOD and several high profile Pole citizens are disappearing. Fantastic.


4 stars (out of 4)

Thursday, December 22, 2022

The Galaxy, and the Ground Within

Becky Chambers

Book 4 of the Wayfarers series

Chambers continues to impress with this final entry in the series. She has created a multi-species universe and is exceptionally adept at using this universe to illuminate the lives we live here on earth. The setting for this story is Gora, a lifeless, rocky planet with no redeeming quality other than it's location at a jump-point crossroads. It is that freeway stopover in central New Mexico with gas stations, a minimart and a motel 6. Three guests have pulled in to a local habitat/rest stop when there is a catastrophic satellite avalanche event that prevents all planetary launch/landings and all communication. So forced short-term down time for the visitors. In the habitat are the owner and her kid (both Laru - a snuffleuffugous type creature in my mind), an Aeluon (communicates via color), a Quelin (short segmented and shelled bug like creature) and an Akarak (a methane breathing tree dweller). As these complete strangers interact and converse, Chambers has created a setting to discuss colonization, war and pacifism, the meaning of home, immigration, gender development, all while exploring the mechanism of dialogue and discourse among disagreeing sentients. Must read...

4 stars (out of 4)

Sunday, December 18, 2022

A Winter's Promise

Christelle Dabos

Book 1 of The Mirror Visitor Quartet

Ophelia is a reader. She lives on the ark Anima, has Artemis as her family spirit and is a typical loner. In this world created by Dabos, the earth has ruptured and all life is now living on a series of floating land chunks called arks. There are 21 major arks (each with a family spirit, aka immortal family ancestor) and a few score minor arks. As a reader, Ophelia can see/know the history of any object she touches. Or more specifically, she can know the "life" of that object and see everyone who has touched it in its life. So she wears gloves. As a loner, she is not interested in marriage, but the ruling matchmakers on her ark have arranged for her to marry a man of status from the Pole ark. She goes, and finds a world she is not prepared for. 

This is a fabulous world, and I find it interesting to think about how science fiction worlds vary from international authors (this is a French work translated to English). This story is not about colonization and military, but about court intrigue. It is about power and class and history. Maybe it is me succumbing to stereotype, but this seems very French. 

4 stars (out of 4)