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Blog Archive
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▼
2014
(156)
-
▼
August
(10)
- "Cabinet of Curiosities: 36 Tales Brief & Sinister...
- "Mouseheart: Vol 1" by Lisa Fiedler (Reviewed by C...
- The 6th Extinction by James Rollins (Reviewed by M...
- "The Boundless" by Kenneth Oppel (Reviewed by Cind...
- GUEST REVIEW: The Mirror Empire by Kameron Hurley ...
- "The Luck Uglies: The Luck Uglies #1" by Paul Durh...
- “Words of Radiance” by Brandon Sanderson (Reviewed...
- “Lockstep” by Karl Schroeder (Reviewed by Casey Bl...
- "Death's Academy" by Michael Bast (Reviewed by Cin...
- Mini-Reviews: “American Craftsmen” by Tom Doyle, ...
-
▼
August
(10)
Order “Lockstep” HERE
Read An Excerpt HERE
I'm not normally a
hard science fiction reader, but the premise of Karl Schroeder's latest novel Lockstep
intrigued me. Then I started reading and it sucked me in.
So for those of you
who are likewise not normally into hard SF, Schroeder does a good job of explaining the hard science aspects
without writing down to the reader, which is a tricky balance to pull off. I do
think he went overly detailed into world-building aspects that weren't really
necessary for the plot, but I think that's also a target audience issue as well
(in that that's not what I'm looking for in a novel, but many hard SF readers
would).
What I loved most is
that Schroeder fully explores the
implications of his core conceit thoroughly. We understand how and why this
technology came into existence, he convinces us of the plausibility of it and
also its advantages, and then he explores just about every way it can go wrong
or be abused. But he doesn't stop there: this isn't a dystopian outlook on the
future, because the next step is what people can do to fix it, not by getting
rid of the technology entirely, but by changing society. He goes deeply into
the implications in politics, economics, and technology (though he mostly
ignores anthropology in world-building outside of societal structures, there's
so much else going on that didn't bother me much). Given the recent spate of dystopia in SFF, I really enjoyed his approach to the future
that goes beyond abuses and into actively thinking about how we can shape our
world.
I appreciated a
teenage protagonist that is both smart and mature even with adolescent
concerns, and the family dynamics were really interesting. It did feel like the
characters acted because the plot needed them to make those choices, though,
rather than acting like actual people. And our protagonist somehow never gets
around to asking questions until he's in a situation when the person he's
asking has an excuse to cut him off, which felt like a very blatant way to pace
exposition. As much world information as he needs to convey to the reader, it
definitely needs to be paced, but the problem is that the plot is full of
twists that the reader has no way to predict because we never have the
information soon enough. Not having the opportunity to put together the clues
does keep the reveals surprising, but it also keeps the reader more outside of
the narrative than engaged in the plot.
So despite some
character and plot bumps, the exploration of the ideas and setting was strong
enough to carry me through to a satisfying conclusion. I'll definitely be
looking up more of Karl Schroeder's
work.
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