wyntrchylde 's review for:

Central Station by Lavie Tidhar
4.0

Central Station
Author: Lavie Tidhar
Publisher: Tachyon Publications
Published In: San Francisco, CA
Date: 2016
Pgs: 275


REVIEW MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS


Summary:
Tel Aviv, the future. 250,000 people live at the base of a space station. Here virtual reality, humanity and all its cultures, the Others, mind plagues, data vampires, cyborgs, and digital consciousness collide. Central Station stands between humanity and space. One leap. Old world, new world.


Genre:
Aliens
Androids
Cyberpunk
Fiction
Mecha
Philosophy
Pulp
Robots
Science fiction
Space
Vampires


Why this book:
A giant spaceport in the middle of Tel Aviv-Jaffa swirling with the religious, cultural differences magnified a billion times by the entire solar system passing through there.
______________________________________________________________________________


Favorite Character:
Mama Miriam Jones who took the orphaned boy in. Miriam who takes Carmel, the data vampire, in. Miriam who, a long time ago, was a young woman, who loved Boris before he left Earth to put distance between himself and all that is Earth.


Miriam’s brother, Achimwene Haile Selaissie Jones, bookseller and friend to Ibrahim, the alte-zachen man.


Character I Most Identified With:
Lots of characters here. Each of them fronts their own layer to this world’s onion.


I feel Achimwene in my love of books. His descriptions and the descriptions of his shop ring a bell in my head and heart.


The Feel:
There’s a Pinocchio story in here. They are all chasing being human in their individual ways. And finding that humanity in odd ways unique to each individual.


Echoes of Beauty and the Beast show in a subplot here with Motl and Isobel.


And more echoes of Romeo and Juliet in many of the relationships in the book.


Favorite Scene / Quote:
Great world building. Lots of texture and backhanded info dump without being overwhelming. Info dump coming through character action and individual scene setting. Well done.


The description of what Carmel did to Stolichnaya Biru, though whether he intended all along to make his suicide part of his Stillness within a Storm art installation at Polyphemus Port on Titan or if he was pushed further around the bend by Carmel draining his soul, life, data a bit at a time.


Love Motl’s flashback to one of the wars that he was caught up in as a robotnik. Dune’s sandworms in the Sinai. A bioweapon that got loose and started breeding beneath the sands. The Bedouins hunting them for the medicinal qualities of their venom is a nice touch.


Achimwene’s reverence when Ibrahim brings him a box from a time capsule, a box full of ancient books.


The deep Nirvana of the in-book gaming world, the MMORPG on quantum steroids, and the possibility of diving deep into the game architecture dredging through its past and coming to...I’m not going to ruin it, but it made me laugh hard.


Pacing:
No real action through the majority of this book. But the world is so immersive that you can read a chapter that is a noded man sitting with a cyborged robotnik having coffee and talking about old times and the future and it feels like a lot has happened. Tidhar has created a tremendously immersive experience in this book.


Hmm Moments:
Elronites? LOL. Stood in context against the various religions and beliefs from the real world and the ones that are unique to the setting which are all part and parcel of this Tel Aviv-Jaffa-Central Station megacity and the Asimovian and Heinleinian aspects, that’s awesome.


How many cloned messiah came out of the vats? How many different factions are trying to gin up their own unifier?


A genetically certified descendant of King David rode into Jerusalem on a white donkey, amidst portents of an ending, not necessarily The End. Then, someone took him out with a sniper rifle. And, since then the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv-Jaffa-Central Station corridor had been awash with almost messiahs; genejobs, Others beyond the human condition, some points between human and virtual. But messiah projects were everywhere; the Singularity Jesus Project in Laos, the Black Monks of Mars, or the massive virtuality birthing and rebirthing the victims of The Holocaust taking place on the Zion asteroid as it makes its way out system following a beamed dream of what they believed to be a dreaming alien god, 6,000,000 virtual Jewish ghosts taken on an ultimate diaspora.


The Stirgoi / Shambleau data vampires are wicked creatures. Tearing away all that their victims are either all at once or a bite at a time as they slip toward mindlessness / emptiness. The second is what Carmel did to Stolly. The first is what the data vampire on the freighter Emaciated Savior did to Carmel before injecting soul, life, data back into her and making her a Stirgoi in her own right.


Worldbuilding where a cyborg beggar ex-soldier, more machine than man, uses the exclamation “Jesus Elron!” when introduced to a data vampire.


The Burning God was interesting, existing in all the layers of Man, machine, the Conversation, the virtual, the gameverse, and the deep other. Made me think of Burning Man, maybe Burning Man on acid.


WTF Moments:
The Others bodysurfing the humans sounds horrible from the human perspective. The humans being involved out-of-body or asleep and awakening to find something different about their body when they awake.
______________________________________________________________________________


Last Page Sound:
That was cool.


Author Assessment:
Will definitely look at other stuff by Lavie Tidhar.


Knee Jerk Reaction:
instant classic


Disposition of Book:
Irving Public Library
South Campus
Irving, TX


Dewey Decimal System:
F
TID


Would recommend to:
everyone
______________________________________________________________________________