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sherwoodreads 's review for:
Crystal Soldier
by Sharon Lee, Steve Miller
Fans of the Liaden books will have bought this sight unseen. New readers, especially who like space opera, could begin with this one because at last we have the ur-story.
It begins with a sure, deceptively gentle pace. M. Jela Granthor’s Guard (there is a reason for the odd name) is alone on a planet after a crash landing, with enough supplies to survive a short time.
As he follows a line of dead trees down toward what once was an ocean, he reviews his situation: shot down in the on-going war against the sherieka, who were once human, but who redesigned themselves so radically that they now consider themselves perfect, and in order to make the universe sublime enough for them to live in, must eradicate all traces of their human past. Oh, and the human worlds as well.
A battle the humans are losing.
Jela discovers as he reaches the shoreline that the trees are getting smaller, and at last he realizes that the line of trees was deliberate, that is, accomplished by the trees themselves, dropping pods that rolled a ways downhill to grow on the banks of the diminishing water, a desperate tactic to survive. Just before he’s picked up he finds one remaining tree, still barely alive, and he decides to take it with him.
His superiors send him for further training, despite the fact that his series of genetic warriors, the M. series, has been superceded; they appreciate a survivor. Along with his training comes advanced mathematics, theories about the crystallization—and decrystalization—of the universe. Don’t lose sight of any of these threads—genetic development of people bred to a specific purpose, mathematical theories, or the tree—because everything begins to add up about the time Jela meets another Pilot, named Cantra, who walks into a restaurant randomly seeking companionship of another pilot over a meal.
The two share a pleasant meal, begin to depart, and their lives are wrenched from personal choice into resistance to the will of rapidly multiplying forces. The pacing becomes the headlong run that is a signature of a Lee/Miller adventure. Cantra is more than she seems. Jela is more than he seems. The Batcher serving woman they rescue is more than she seems, and again, do not forget the tree.
The novel does end on a cliff-hanger—we are told on the cover that this book is part one of the Great Migration Duology--but there is a small arc of resolution that renders the cliff-hanger anticipatory instead of exasperating. Pay attention to everything: names, places, even phrases. I was delighted by the buried references that functioned like memory hypertext, evoking the grand tapestry of the Liaden series.
It begins with a sure, deceptively gentle pace. M. Jela Granthor’s Guard (there is a reason for the odd name) is alone on a planet after a crash landing, with enough supplies to survive a short time.
As he follows a line of dead trees down toward what once was an ocean, he reviews his situation: shot down in the on-going war against the sherieka, who were once human, but who redesigned themselves so radically that they now consider themselves perfect, and in order to make the universe sublime enough for them to live in, must eradicate all traces of their human past. Oh, and the human worlds as well.
A battle the humans are losing.
Jela discovers as he reaches the shoreline that the trees are getting smaller, and at last he realizes that the line of trees was deliberate, that is, accomplished by the trees themselves, dropping pods that rolled a ways downhill to grow on the banks of the diminishing water, a desperate tactic to survive. Just before he’s picked up he finds one remaining tree, still barely alive, and he decides to take it with him.
His superiors send him for further training, despite the fact that his series of genetic warriors, the M. series, has been superceded; they appreciate a survivor. Along with his training comes advanced mathematics, theories about the crystallization—and decrystalization—of the universe. Don’t lose sight of any of these threads—genetic development of people bred to a specific purpose, mathematical theories, or the tree—because everything begins to add up about the time Jela meets another Pilot, named Cantra, who walks into a restaurant randomly seeking companionship of another pilot over a meal.
The two share a pleasant meal, begin to depart, and their lives are wrenched from personal choice into resistance to the will of rapidly multiplying forces. The pacing becomes the headlong run that is a signature of a Lee/Miller adventure. Cantra is more than she seems. Jela is more than he seems. The Batcher serving woman they rescue is more than she seems, and again, do not forget the tree.
The novel does end on a cliff-hanger—we are told on the cover that this book is part one of the Great Migration Duology--but there is a small arc of resolution that renders the cliff-hanger anticipatory instead of exasperating. Pay attention to everything: names, places, even phrases. I was delighted by the buried references that functioned like memory hypertext, evoking the grand tapestry of the Liaden series.