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Newton's Wake by Ken Macleod
pub: Orbit/Times Warner. 369 page hardback. Price:
£17.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-84149-175-6
check out website: www.OrbitBooks.co.uk
and www.TimesWarnerBooks.co.uk
'Newton's
Wake' is a stand-alone story, self-billed as a space opera. It opens
with a team of 'combat archaeologists' exiting a gateway onto a
distant world, Eurydice, with the intention of looting a vast and
ancient monolith.
The rather inexperienced leader, Lucinda Carlyle, leads them to
disaster when machines within the monolith are roused and those
of her party not killed by them are mostly finished off by the settlers
who arrive in force. Carlyle is captured by the settlers, thanks
in part to the treachery of her spacesuit which is run by a downloaded
personality of a former human, and who takes this opportunity to
escape her control.
Using
a personality in this way is regarded by the settlers as akin to
slavery. Gradually, it is revealed that centuries before the very
distant Earth had effectively been destroyed during the course of
a major war between the US and a United Europe.
The settlers are the descendants of people who fled the disaster.
Carlyle is a member of the family Carlyle descended from Glasgow
gangsters who control the only web of gateways between the stars.
They are just two of the groups that survived the 'Hard Rapture'
when, as well as nuclear destruction engulfed the old world, it
was over run by war machines. These groups are all traceable back
to Earth, such as the AOs, standing for Americans Offline who are
the descendants of redneck farmers.
The discovery of Eurydice sets in train many such forces all eager
to profit from the newly discovered world. Ken Macleod has written
a good story which unfolds well from the beginning as an adventure
story. The background is slowly revealed to us. The Carlyles are
still essentially gangsters after loot who are
determined to cling onto everything they regard as their own.
This is also a world where people can be 'downloaded' so should
they die the retained personality or human essence, can be downloaded
into a new body. Macleod makes this seem quite possible and believable
and it enables his characters to return after annihilating experiences.
It also enables the personality in the suit, Professor Shlaim, to
be reconstituted as a person.
He had been serving 'time' for his alleged responsibility for the
Hard Rapture of centuries before. Having been used by the Carlyles
for years, he is determined to get his own back and causes as much
difficulty for Lucinda Carlyle and her family as he can. Eurydice
holds many personalities in stasis and as the threat from a variety
of groups, including re-awakened machines from the monolith, begins
to group they began to 'thaw out' personalities from the past with
military and other appropriate experience.
It becomes clear that many of these wanted to retake the Earth
from the machines (Returners) not flee from it. Amongst them, are
a pair of folk singers, Winter and Calder, whose old songs roused
the human defenders against the machine centuries before. This is
a multi-layered tale, told from several viewpoints and in addition
to the threats to Eurydice from outsiders, the pressures began to
cause problems within the society itself.
Macleod also brings up similar pressures within other groups such
as the descendants of Asiatic Communists who terraform worlds. As
well as a climax on Eurydice, there is also a final climax on old
Earth itself and something of what had occurred long ago is revealed.
I though that this started off as a good adventure story with plenty
of action. The author skilfully revealed more and more information
about the true nature of events and did so in a very readable style.
The technology he deploys is well done and the reader can suspend
his or her disbelief and believe that not only will this work but
accept the writer's view of how this might effect the society. For
instance, the ability to 'reprint' a person's essence onto a new
body enables a team under Lucinda Carlyle to contemplate what is
otherwise a suicide mission. Those that do die and are 'reborn'
do not, of course, have any recollection of the mission as they
were 'copied' before the actual mission was undertaken.
Despite this being a possibility, it is an unpleasant experience
people are not eager to voluntarily repeat. Whilst I enjoyed the
book I have to say that it rather seemed to lose its way towards
the end. I did not finding the ending satisfactory. The expected
battle on Eurydice was rather a damp squid and the final ending
on Earth I found unsatisfactory.
It rather lapsed into wordy explanations that failed to ravel
or unravel everything which had gone on in the book. I like space
opera. On balance, this was a good read but could have been better,
especially the ending.
Paul Hanley
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