OFF THE SHELF


 
IN THIS ISSUE
 Priam's Lens
 The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixteenth Annual Collection


RECENT REVIEWS
 The Conqueror's Child
 The Dragon's Eye
 Cryptonomicon
 The Silicon Dagger
 Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace
 Far Horizons
 The Terrorists of Irustan
 First Evidence
 Northworld Trilogy
 A Boy and His Tank


Request a review

Gallery

Back issues

Search

Feedback

Submissions

The Staff

Home



Suggestions

Priam's Lens

Can a few unarmed humans take on invaders with godlike powers?

* Priam's Lens
* By Jack L. Chalker
* Del Rey Books
* $6.99/$8.99 Canada
* Paperback, June 1999
* ISBN 0-345-40294-4

Review by A.M. Dellamonica

Nobody returns from a world that the Titans have overrun, because the mysterious aliens have a foolproof defense against every possible attack. Otherwise oblivious to human activity, the aliens drain the power from all technology--ships, weapons, computers, city infrastructures, even flashlights--that attracts their notice. This leaves machine-dependant humanity unprepared and vulnerable, easy prey for the aliens who invade without otherwise acknowledging their target world's inhabitants.

Our Pick: B+

Jack L. Chalker's new book, Priam's Lens, begins with the Titans well on their way to conquering a formerly human-dominated galaxy. They radically terraform each conquest into a low-tech garden world, killing most of its population. Scant numbers of primitive humans remain, eking out a tenuous survival where they once numbered in the billions. On the fringes of the galaxy, survivors and refugees can only wait for more enemy ships to finish the extermination. Naval officer Gene Harker is on one of those fringe worlds, bitterly aware that time is running out.

Hope comes to Harker in the unlikely person of an aged opera diva, who claims to have heard from a near-legendary pirate named the Flying Dutchman. The Dutchman is assembling a team to return to one of the Titan-controlled worlds, Helena. The team will attempt to survive long enough to locate and transmit information about an experimental weapon, a weapon which may be the key to saving not only Helena but the entire human race. With such high stakes, it is little wonder that Harker is assigned to join the mission--as a stowaway.

Simply thought-provoking

Chalker is always delightful when he is depicting tech-dependant humans struggling in a primitive environment, and Priam's Lens is no exception. Humans on Helena are forbidden even the use of fire, and though the landing party is well-prepared at the outset, a series of mishaps strips away their supplies. The underlying message--that the human race is losing key survival skills, that in the face of catastrophe humanity may lapse all the way back to savagery--is relevant and thought-provoking. That said, it is delivered simplistically, and some readers might prefer a deeper examination of this issue than is provided in this book. Others may flatly disagree with the author's conclusions.

The novel is a pleasure to read, with crystalline prose and a measured pace. The characters are nicely drawn, though not overly deep, and a story line that follows Helena's now-primitive human survivors shows an intriguing society cobbled together from bits of Orthodox Christianity and the tales of ancestors only two generations removed. As changes wrought by Titan experimentation begin to take their toll on the landing party, their situation worsens credibly, so that success is in doubt to the very end.

As villains, the Titans are at times too mysterious and remote, and it is something of a disappointment that they never come into full view. Godlike and inscrutable, they provide an appropriate sense of menace to both humanity at large and the landing party in particular. Unfortunately, their power is never completely unleashed or fully explored. Readers who like to see their heroes go face to face against their antagonists may find this lack of a confrontation disappointing.

Even so, Priam's Lens is an ideal summer novel, and Chalker has served up entertainment and adventure in generous and balanced portions.

Chalker fans will love this book, and readers new to his work will find it a pleasant introduction. -- A.M.

Back to the top.


The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixteenth Annual Collection

Gardner Dozois picks the best short fiction of 1998

* The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixteenth Annual Collection
* Edited by Gardner Dozois
* St. Martin's Press
* $29.95
* Hardcover, June 1999
* ISBN 0-312-20963-0

Review by Clinton Lawrence

It's time again for Gardner Dozois' annual The Year's Best Science Fiction, a reprint short story anthology now in its sixteenth edition. This year's collection contains 25 stories in all, the majority of them of novelette length or longer. In addition to the fiction, Dozois also presents his yearly summary that touches on major trends in science fiction publishing, as well as an extensive list of recommended stories that didn't make the collection.

Our Pick: A

Last year, Dozois included a surprisingly large number (given his long-standing reputation for embracing a very broad and inclusive definition of the genre) of hard science fiction stories. It's a more balanced collection this year, featuring stories that range from hard SF, like Geoffrey A. Landis' "Approaching Perimelasma," about a journey into a black hole, to Ian R. McLeod's excellent alternate history, "The Summer Isles," in which a man must come to terms with the fact that his former lover has risen to become the fascist dictator of Great Britain in a world in which the Allies lost World War I. Then there are stories like Tanith Lee's "Jedella Ghost," which is far from the typical ghost tale but still seems more fantasy than SF.

One of the things that seems apparent from this year's selection is that writers are turning back to space for inspiration. The rest of the solar system is again fertile ground for narratives, and a substantial number of the stories take place on alien worlds. In "Free in Asveroth," a story about members of alien species fleeing captivity, playwright Jim Grimsley chooses the alien viewpoint to tell the story. There are plenty of near-future stories set on Earth as well, and the result is a diverse collection that places a premium on both storytelling and skillful writing.

The institution continues

There's not a weak story in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixteenth Annual Collection, and it's difficult to decide where to start in mentioning some of the best. McLeod's "The Summer Isles" has to be considered one of the top stories, however, simply because he so impressively balances his protagonist's internal turmoil with a convincing and interesting political scenario that parallels what really happened in WWI. Ted Chiang's "The Story of Your Life" likewise brilliantly juxtaposes a linguist's work trying to learn to communicate with a visiting alien species and her complex relationship with her daughter. Robert Reed's "The Cuckoo's Boys" is an excellent and surprising tale about a group of boys born, through the spread of an artificial plague, with the DNA of a fugitive scientist.

Michael Swanwick's "The Very Pulse of the Machine" is an outstanding story about an explorer running out of oxygen on Io who becomes aware that the satellite is alive. Stephen Baxter's "Saddlepoint: Roughneck" is an excellent piece about a capitalist obsessed with finding important volatiles deep under the surface of the moon. In "Down in the Dark," William Barton poignantly explores a bleak future in which Earth is dead and only a few thousand humans live in colonies scattered across the solar system. And Gwyneth Jones is remarkably able to create something new out of the Cinderella story in "La Cenerentola".

Other stories that are particularly noteworthy include Greg Egan's "Oceanic," Geoffrey A. Landis' "Approaching Perimelasma," Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Island of the Immortals," Howard Waldrop's "US," Ian McDonald's "The Days of Solomon Gursky," William Browning Spencer's "The Halfway House at the Heart of Darkness," Rob Chilson's "This Side of Independence," Tony Daniel's "Grist," and Jim Grimsley's "Free in Asveroth".

As usual, Dozois has chosen an outstanding set of stories to represent the best of 1998. This series has become an institution, and deservedly so.

Always one of my favorite books of the year. -- Clint

Back to the top.




Home

News of the Week | On Screen | Off the Shelf | Classics
Cool Stuff | Games | Site of the Week | Letters


Copyright © 1998-2003, Science Fiction Weekly (TM). All rights reserved. Reproduction in any medium strictly prohibited. Maintained by scifiweekly@scifi.com.