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ITCOO: A Mixed Bag
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Lee: I really love that idea. What if...(taking it to spoilers) (view spoiler)

Interesting thought. I never really felt that him being very well liked was part of his powers. But Gail definitely crossed some ethical lines with this romance...


I had the same thought. That "romance" just developed too fast for no apparent reason. I think it would have felt more normal after the two characters had interacted more outside the lab.
Overall I enjoyed the book but like others the world building and station portion was more interesting to me than back end of the book.

A stellar recommendation!

Sometimes a guy isn't that attractive, special or bright, yet an amazing woman inexplicably falls for them.
I have no other explanation for the existence of my wife.
Books mentioned in this topic
Downbelow Station (other topics)Downbelow Station (other topics)
Spoiler protected below for the digest readers, so expect full book spoilers within the spoilertext.
(view spoiler)[What a mixed bag this book is. We've got a first contact that maybe isn't, or perhaps the intelligence is so strange we don't understand it. Humanity pulling back for sheer survival and not caring who gets hurt in the process. Should be a great book, right? Well, I found some odd stereotypes along the way, and the scale was well off.
Early on we hear of the terraformed worlds and humanity moving out into space. Sounds great! Big scale! Early HFY (Humanity Fuck Yeah) optimistic book!
Well, nope. After the setup, we...spend a third of the book cramped into a barely-working space station. Sure, the sociological dynamics are interesting, but don't get to the level of compelling. Slow reveal on station dynamics and how the various groups worked out a functional society in extreme resource scarcity. Nice work, and as I read this I'm thinking that the Expanse writers must have read this book. Rosalind especially seems like she should be wearing the split circle of the OPA.
Parts of the station dynamics leave me quizzically tilting my head, like the "confused dog" meme. So people live on ships outside the station and get their via wires. I can suspend disbelief that far. But next I'm supposed to believe kids played there? Like some kind of space playground? What kind of parent would say "sure, go out to a vacuum in a leaky spacesuit, and if you make the slightest mistake you're dead. Tah, have fun!"
And then Malley. He...has an aversion to airlocks? On a space station. It's as if Czerneda went to a writing workshop and was challenged to come up with the most unlikely phobia for a space dweller to have.
The action is good in chunks, and the setups work. The facility in spacewalks established early turns into a critical plot point later.
I can buy the captain of the ship, Gail Smith, and her motivations leading up to becoming captain. Humanity needs to understand and perhaps exterminate the Quill. It's a survival imperative. She's ambitious, smart, capable. And then...
then...
She is willing to throw everything away for her burgeoning emotions. Can we not do this trope? Could we never see this trope again? Can we drop this trope into a waste bin and shoot it into the sun? It's the "incompetent female captain" bit ad nauseum. I think in that situation a woman is just as capable as a man of being hardnosed and making tough decisions. Heck, ST:TNG got it right when Troi couldn't pass command training until she was able to send Geordi to his death while making a needed repair. It was a simulation, but that's what you have to be willing to do. (Episode is Thine Own Self.)
The plot moves on adequately. We never get the vast scale implied by the early part of the book. What we do get is a look at an unknowable intelligence. It's either intelligent and so strange we just don't get it, or is an impressionable medium that is not in itself intelligent. While we're led to the latter conclusion, at the end of the book I wasn't so sure. Perhaps the Quill are just so different we can't understand them.
I wanted this book to be larger scale than it was. We get just a touch of that at the end when we deal with what the Quill actually are. All in all enjoyable, even with obvious tropes and stereotypes. I wanted it to step off the deep end like, say, Stapledon's Star Maker, but instead it stuck to the unknowable unknown, more like Rendezvous with Rama.
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