Slow Gods by Claire NorthMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
I'd never read any of this author's work before, but after seeing a couple of glowing reviews I decided to take a chance on it. I'm glad I did, as it's one of the best books I've read so far this year.
This is a space opera, but it's unlike any space opera I've ever read before. Most space operas have casts of thousands and galactic- or universe-wide stakes. This book has plenty of characters, but it's told entirely through the eyes of one Mawukana na-Vdnaze, a protagonist who starts out as human, then becomes something utterly inhuman, and is slowly working his way back to something close to human as the story ends. This is all summed up in a terrific opening line: "My name is Mawukana na-Vdnaze, and I am a very poor copy of myself."
It's also the story of the Shine, a fascistic interplanetary regime who commits atrocities against its own people and who is brought down in the end. It is brought down by a huge, ancient artificial intelligence called the Slow, who traverses the cosmos and tends to descend on settled planets to warn them of momentous upcoming events. In the story, the Slow may as well be a god, given how it seems to predict the future and manipulates events...and possibly manipulated Mawukana's existence and life. That is left ambiguous in the story, but the implication is definitely there.
It's also the story of the author's version of FTL travel, known as arcspace: an alternate dimension that ships use to jump across the lightyears, which can only be accessed by a ship operated by an organic Pilot. In the Shine, people are forced into this position and used until they die and/or go insane. Mawukana was a Shine Pilot, and on one arcspace jump he died. Then something in those fathomless depths brought him back to life, recreating him out of the stuff of arcspace itself, leaving him immortal and impossible to kill, and utterly inhuman. At the beginning of the book, he is pretty much an inhuman monster, and over the course of the story he becomes....less so. He learns to feel, to regret, to help others--and even to love, a love so profound it will guide him through the rest of his days.
All these elements are brought together by the chunk of hard SF that sets off the plot: a binary star system collapses on itself, and the resulting shock waves of radiation will obliterate all life within an 83 light-year radius. This includes several Shine worlds, and the Shine, as befits a corporate fascist, refuses to acknowledge this is happening (at least for its employees and its indentured workers/slaves--its Managers and Executors get free rides out, of course). The Slow is the one who warns the people in these various systems of what is coming, and it is the Slow who orchestrates the downfall of the Shine, sacrificing (Mawukana figures) nearly two billion people to save many billions more.
This story is beautifully told, with lovely prose and many different, well-thought-out and fascinating cultures. Time-wise, it covers over two hundred years, the entirety of Mawukana's life and then some. It's not flashy or bursting with glorious battles, but it grows on you from that opening line. This is a terrific story that gets my highest recommendation.
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