|
Iron Sunrise by Charles Stross
pub: Ace. 355 page hardback. Price: $23.95 (US),
$36.00 (CAN). ISBN: 0-441-01159-4.
check out website: www.penguin.com
Someone has committed the ultimate crime. The planet of Moscow and
all its moons and satellites have been destroyed by a planet killing
weapon and the implications are huge.
Moscow's own defensive missiles have been triggered and are on
an unalterable course to hit New Dresden, a similar world to Moscow
except it happened to be top of the list for retaliation. Only the
surviving ambassadors are able to stop the weapons but someone thinks
it's funny to pick them off before they can change their minds.
Wednesday is a refugee from one of Moscow's outlying space stations,
Old Newfie.

Her invisible friend, Herman, had asked her to recover some evidence
before it was destroyed by the radioactive wavefront. Herman is
a representative of the Escaton. This benign if meddling species
like to keep a fatherly eye on the galaxy to make sure that no one
gets above themselves. They are usually able to step in and sort
out the mess but this time there have been unexpected developments
which show that even the Escaton are not infallible.
Three years on and living in poverty with her family, Wednesday
becomes the target of some mopping up thanks to her unwanted visit
to collect evidence and gets a new message from Herman. With her
family eliminated, she will be next unless she can escape on the
visiting interstellar ship the Romanov. Frank's a journalist who
would rather not get involved, he still has nightmares about his
stint on Newpeace during its abortive revolution.
Aboard the Romanov, he is satisfied sending thundering editorials
to the Times until Wednesday blunders into his life and his heart.
With the UN, in the person of Rachel Monsuer, trying to stop the
assassin, the link is made to the Romanov. An abortive attempt on
the ambassador's life on New Dresden means Rachel and husband Martin
Springfield are forced to board the Romanov and attempt to track
down the elusive killer.
This is a great book. So good, I've read it twice already. There
is a huge amount of information, description, scientific theory
and plot packed into this book. It effortlessly combines space,
morality, politics, humour and romance into the 355 pages of an
enlarged paperback. Moving smoothly, it sings out for a quality
series but it would be hard to do the densely packed pages justice.
I enjoyed Stross' first novel but this is infinitely more enjoyable
and for me, at least, easier to follow. His characters feel pain,
exhaustion and fear and the descriptions and necessary information
do not hold up the movement of the story. His created environment
is spot on with its mix of potential technology such as the implants
which enhance human response and email delivered to directly to
the retina combined with the fiction of interstellar space travel.
I like the way Stross mixed in politics which never changes and
people just trying to get on with their lives. All in all, a great
read and recommended.
Sue Davies
News Editor and Reviewer
www.dvd.reviewer.co.uk
|