Saturday, 26 November 2016

Gateway, Frederik Pohl

Gateway is one of those great sci-fi novels that don't take you into another world, they show you another version of this one.

The protagonist is Robinette Broadhead, we meet him in a therapy session and the novel flicks between his therapy sessions in the present and his life to date. The novel artfully reveals the source of Robinette's trauma. It uses the same mechanic as Atwood's Oryx and Crake but Gateway is much more organic. We learn of Robinette's time on Gateway, a space station built by the Hechee, another much more advanced and long since disappeared life form. Humans have found the station and ships programmed for unknown destinations. Most people on Earth are poverty stricken and looking for ways to improve their lot. One of the ways they can do this is to go to Gateway and man the ships for unknown destinations, hoping firstly that they return and hoping to find other Hechee artifacts for which they will be paid well. It is a long drawn out game of russian roulette.

The novel is interspersed with posters, personal columns and bulletins from Gateway, efficiently offering insights and background to the atmosphere of the place and the lives of those in it. It was a pleasure to read, made more so by the fact Robinette isn't a perfect leading man, he is flawed and sometimes unlikeable.



Sunday, 20 November 2016

Setting Free the Bears, John Irving

Setting Free the Bears was a struggle for me, and one I have given up on.
Itt is everything irritating about Irving's novels without the usual great story. It feels immature, the characters are a young man's idea of 'cool' young men, they are two dimensional and frankly irritating.
Part one was readable, part two quickly became political and silly. Not one for me. The copy I was reading had a great cover though.



Tuesday, 1 November 2016

Crime Never Pays, Various

I've been dipping in and out of this in the library. I love short stories because they are usually much more mysterious than novels, they are a whole different artform. That wasn't the case with these stories as the crimes were solved or explained at the end, though they did seem to be looser than the authors' full length detective fiction. An enjoyable couple of hours!