Exultant 128
Exultant | |
author | Stephen Baxter |
pages | 490 |
publisher | Gollancz |
rating | 9 |
reviewer | Motor |
ISBN | 0345457889 |
summary | The second book of the Destiny's Children novels |
Exultant is not a direct sequel to Coalescent, in that it doesn't pick up the story of George Poole and continue it. The concept of coalescence plays little part in this new novel -- so anyone expecting more of the same may be disappointed, but not for long. Once you start reading Exultant, it quickly becomes clear that the Destiny's Children novels are part of the Xeelee sequence (something that was not obvious in the first novel). The Xeelee sequence is a future history, mapped out by Baxter, in which humanity spreads out from Earth; is crushed and enslaved; frees itself; and in a much harder and violent form begins to assimilate and destroy other alien cultures, all the while being unaware of the larger and more important cosmic battle being fought all around it.
At the opening of Exultant, humanity is close to the end of its third wave of assimilation. It has spread across the galaxy crushing everything in its way -- even the mysterious and powerful Xeelee have retreated into the core of the galaxy. The whole of human society is held together unchanged across millions of light-years and billions of worlds by the Druz doctrines -- ruthless rules intended to keep humanity conquering and to punish any deviations from the human norm. The result is a human society turned into a colossal war machine, dedicated to one aim: the destruction of its last enemy, the Xeelee. But the war machine has been stalled for thousands of years. The Xeelee have no intention of leaving the galactic core, and their advanced technology (nightfighters constructed out of flaws in space-time itself) and ability to manipulate time means that every human assault is repelled easily. Trillions of human lives are wasted by hurling themselves at Xeelee defenses ... and it goes on and on. A war machine with billions of worlds full of generations of soldiers barely in their teens born in tanks and dying in thousand-year-long projects aimed at smashing the Xeelee, and knowing nothing but training, the doctrines and death. Whether in a coalescent hive or a not, it seems most human lives are spent in an empty drone-like struggle governed by simple rules -- indeed this message pervades the novel. In Coalescent the rules governing the eusocial society were:
Sisters matter more than daughters.
Ignorance is strength.
Listen to your sisters.
In Exultant the rules are the Druz doctrines, with a key part being 'A brief life burns brightly.'
In the middle of this multi-millennial slaughter, a young pilot, Pirius, and his crew decide to disobey doctrine and instead of throwing their lives away in a pointless heroic gesture they try a bold strategy. As a result they capture a Xeelee nightfighter, which is the first significant development in the war for hundreds of generations. Naturally, the rigid doctrinal bureaucracy chooses to prosecute him rather than promote him -- but with a twist. Thanks to his faster than light travel, Pirius has arrived back a few years before he left. Time is a malleable thing in this war and meeting oneself isn't unusual.
He arrives back to find himself still in training, and both Piriuses must be punished: one for breaking doctrine and the other to make sure he doesn't in future. His saviour is a strange Earth commissioner (part of the powerful bureaucracy controlling the war effort) who is desperate for a way to unlock the stalemate with the Xeelee and bring to an end the waste of life. He needs someone willing to step outside the rules -- even if it is only a little at first. So begins the split story of Pirius Red and Pirius Blue. One sent to a punishment camp to train as Xeelee cannon fodder, and the other taken back to Earth to see a solar system radically changed by alien occupation, thousands of years of industrial activity and a society at the core of the war effort that is not as doctrinally pure as he'd been brought up to believe.
No-one will ever accuse Stephen Baxter of thinking small. His Xeelee sequence novels are set in a universe teeming with life since the first fraction of a second after the Big Bang -- and indeed before that -- and a war that has raged between dark matter life-forms and baryonic life such as the Xeelee (with humans as a self-destructive nuisance ignorant of the larger conflict), for most of that time.
Exultant is a story of individual human courage and brilliance, and collective human stupidity and self-destruction. Those who dislike Baxter's work (and there are some!) because it is pessimistic about humanity as a whole will find nothing to change their minds here. On the other hand, anyone looking for hard science-fiction of breathtaking scope and bursting with invention and ideas will love it. Personally, I'm looking forward to seeing where he goes with the next part. One advantage of following Baxter's work is that you rarely have long to wait between novels.
You can purchase Exultant from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Re:Author could have done some research (Score:1)
Going back in Time (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dragon's egg (Score:2)
Stephen Baxter rocks (Score:2, Interesting)
And anyone else notice that Wikipedia is awfully slow or down these days? I wonder why.
Re:Stephen Baxter rocks (Score:2)
Re:Stephen Baxter rocks (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Stephen Baxter rocks (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Stephen Baxter rocks (Score:2)
Personally, the Manifold series was so bad that I vowed never to pay another dollar to him. Indeed, I want my money back for the last book in that series, where I was reduced to reading about pregnant gorillas.
So bad it tainted his good stuff (which he has written some, but earlier in his career)
Sounds original... (Score:3, Interesting)
Some choice snippets really looked great though, especially this one:
Naturally, the rigid doctrinal bureaucracy chooses to prosecute him rather than promote him -- but with a twist.
I liked that. Take a standard literary cliche, but add a 'twist'. Well, it all certainly sounds like a 'tiwst' on convention, what with all the scifi jargon and strange sounding alien names. I know that sounds flippant, but it is cool. I must admit, this following part was funny though too:
One advantage of following Baxter's work is that you rarely have long to wait between novels.
Hah, is that an advantage.. or a disadvantage?
Sounds a little unoriginal and.. weird. But hey, who am I to condemn a book that I haven't read. Oh, slashdot. Maybe if I see it in the bookstore I'll pick it up, I'll see what other readers say.
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:4, Funny)
I thought "taking a standard literary cliche, but adding a 'twist'," was the most standard literary cliche.
Re:Sounds original... (Score:3, Insightful)
Take a standard literary cliche, like taking a standard literary cliche and adding a twist, and add a twist. Clever. We've added two twists to a standard literary cliche. But we still end up with a standard literary cliche. By induction, standard literary cliches are closed under twists.
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Hah! I've read a half-dozen of Baxter's books and while mildly entertaining, "original" is not the word I'd use. Basically he has one story: mankind's war against an ancient race called the Xeelee. Every book is a retelling of the same story, with diffferent characters. Yawn. I thought Coalescent was going somewhere new, but sadly it has descended into the same old plot by the end of the book.
Now some great authors are: Neal Asher, Richard Morgan and Alastair Reynolds. Really i
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
I've seen a couple Brits mention Alastair Reynolds as being worth reading, but I never find him in the bookstore - guess I'll just have to order online.
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds original... (Score:2)
Maybe you can fill me in. I'm a HUGE fan of Peter F. Hamilton's Night's Dawn trilogy and his Fallen Dragon, though I seriously disliked Misspent Youth.
How does this compare? Am I missing out on something?
Skip chapter 14 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:2)
Well, at least it gives a new meaning to the phrase "Go fuck yourself"! Bwahahahaaaahhaaaaaaaaaa......
*sigh*
It's worse than that. (Score:2)
ewwwwwwww!
But it was original.
Re:It's worse than that. (Score:1)
Oh. My. God.
I don't think that there's anything wrong with being gay, and I don't think there's anything wrong with masturbation, but for some reason the idea of fucking yourself is just kind of gross to me...
Then, I read your post. Thanks, I'll never sleep again.
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:2)
The Man Who Folded Himself [chtorr.com]
More self fucking than you can shake a, ahem, stick at.
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:2)
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:1)
Re:Skip chapter 14 (Score:2)
This sounds like a dystopia (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This sounds like a dystopia (Score:2)
I think I'm beginning to see the light. If you know your control loop is critically underdamped, and that knowledge can't change the control loop, you'd better find something better to do for the next 50~60 years. Oh wait, it's just a book. Crap.
Re:This sounds like a dystopia (Score:4, Insightful)
Interesting. The story works for me, because first of all, my reaction to the notion of humanity ending up "spread across the galaxy crushing everything in its way", powerful enough to waste trillions of lives and survive, is indeed "Exultation".
> Dystopias succeed, when they do, by pointing out dangerous trends in the present, and showing what could happen if they're allowed to grow unchecked.
And simultaneously, "a human society turned into a colossal war machine, dedicated to one aim: the destruction of its last enemy" is precisely what we have now -- and it applies whether you've chosen the side of America 2.0 or Allah 0.9 -- either way you're adopting "ruthless rules intended to keep [your notion of what it means to be] humanity conquering and to punish any deviations from [your ideal of] the human norm)
> Even so, it's a good review, because it told me exactly why I personally wouldn't want to read this. If you're interested in this type of thing, I hope you enjoy it.
No argument there. A future history in which we actually win such an otherwise pointless grudge match of a war sounds pretty interesting, particularly if we have to do so by transcending ourselves. For me, the best SF stories are simultaneously about humanity while being about transcending humanity. In that sense, I agree it's a good review. But I'm also sufficiently "interested in that type of thing" that it doesn't even sound dystopic. YMMV :)
Only two choices? (Score:2)
Some of us have chosen secularism and liberal democracy. We must be crazy not to participate in the "USA is #1" vs "Allah will punish" you nonsense the right wing has framed as a easy and pathetic frame to explain various extra-legal adventuring overseas.
Re:This sounds like a dystopia (Score:2)
The eventual heat-death of the Universe does not, in and of itself, create a dystopia. All things must come to an end eventually, and a future in which mankind accepts this isn't a dystopia. A story where the last few remnants of life are warring over the few remaining energy sources trying to stave off personal extinction at the cost of killing everybody else would be dystopic.
The Time Ships (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The Time Ships (Score:3, Informative)
excellent book (Score:1)
I found this to be a very enjoyable book with many fresh concepts. You don't need to read the first book.
MMORPG designers take note (Score:2)
There's your PvE and PvP options.
Of hives and genetics (Score:4, Interesting)
The hive construct arose in these insects because of a unique genetic quirk called haplodiploidy -- females are diploid (getting 2 copies of each chromosome, one from each parent) and males are haploid (getting a single copy of each chromosome from the mother only). This quirk makes females more related to their sisters than to their own daughters. If a bee, ant or wasp "wants" to be selfish, it foregoes having its own offspring and raises sisters. This creates the basis for a very strong social bond in which individuals maximize their own fitness by belonging to a group. Humans have no such genetic basis -- the bond for sociality is limited to a more transactional trade of social tit-for-tat.
I like Stephen Baxter and will have to read this series to see if/how he addresses this issue.
Re:Of hives and genetics (Score:1)
Naked Mole Rats are supposed to be eusocial, (Score:2)
Haplodiploidy may help, but it's not required. (Score:1, Interesting)
There are a lot of non-social haplodiploid wasps and bees, too. Some races of European honeybees have cheating workers that try to lay their own eggs for the other workers to raise instead of the queen's eggs.
Other factors such as overlap of generations and group defense may be more important than chromosome count in the evolution of eusociality.
Personally, I think humans are mor
Re:Of hives and genetics (Score:4, Interesting)
There are many non-haploiding hiving creatures, such as termites, the Japanese, and arguably some forms of gopher and wren - there's even a reasonable argument for the clownfish, which build up coral reefs and sacrifice one so that the rest of the school can escape, and the sequoia, which are entire forests as single entities and which intentionally kill edge trees to keep other plants from crossing soil borders.
IANAEvolutionaryBiologist, but I suspect the primary reason that we see hiving occuring in tiny animals isn't about a particular biological mechanism at all, but rather the food requirements of a hive of things much larger. Transportation isn't cheap, and one of a hive's large vulnerabilities is that the population due to design cannot spread out to increase food available to the individual as do individual predators. As such, the hive is limited to the food sources available within an individual's travel. For this reason, one rarely sees a hive even near a desert border, because the half of the food region which is worthless means that area cannot sustain the hive even if the other half of the region is good. If one deals with a hive of larger creatures, that food cost spirals up stratospherically, which eventually pits the individual's needs directly against those of its hive; it's all well and good to ignore one's daughters in favor of one's sisters, but to ignore one's self in a setting due to food constraints means a significant portion of the population would be starving, meaning that a successful hive would be damned hard to create.
As far as the bond for sociality, many biologists believe that altruism and samaritanism are deeply hard-wired into us, but at the tribal scale instead of the species scale, which is one good argument for the prevalence of racism and other forms of us-vs-them. Preserve the tribe at the expense of other tribes. Fits very well into the worldview wherein one thinks of creatures as vehicles for genes to spread.
So, maybe it's not as cut and dried as you suggest.
Coalescent + Xeelee (Score:1)
I really enjoyed how the Regina and George threads finally merged in the first book. Baxter is one of those authors who is good at keeping a lot of things going on at once without getting lost.
I'm looking forward to reading the rest.
how would they live? (Score:5, Interesting)
Probably just like any other eusocial society? With an egg laying queen, sterile female workers, and mouthless drones who live just long enough to mate? For a neat mammal example of this structure, see Nake mole rats [lpzoo.com].
Re:how would they live? (Score:2, Funny)
sweet! all of us geeks will live forver!
So, it's bookilicious? (Score:4, Funny)
Oops.
Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:2)
Re:Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:2)
Re:Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:2)
Obvious tripe like this, about time-travelling aliense or some such silliness, gives you hope and inspiration? How so?
This only shows how poorly you have read... (Score:2)
Re:This only shows how poorly you have read... (Score:4, Insightful)
There are ideas -- deep, important ideas -- to explore about what it means to be human that can't be done in mainstream literature. Now, science fiction can be bad, but so can any literary form. It can also be great. Again, you could try reading some more. Don't limit yourself to the "major" sf books/series which are more likely to reach for the lowest common denominator to reach a broader audience. Look especially at Nebula Award winners, which are chosen by other writers, not the fans (although Nebula politics can skew results).
Have you read Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner? How about Replay by Ken Grimwood? The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester?
At least you could keep quiet. It's pretty rude to wade into a conversation people are having only to proclaim that they're talking about something only kids should like.
Obvious solution (Score:2)
Re:Why are the fictions reviews scifi only???? (Score:1)
Already Been Done? (Score:1)
Strange coincedence? (Score:5, Funny)
I was just about to post to /. in order to try to get another Score 5, Funny, when all of the sudden I received an email from myself.
Now, this is very dubious, since no one on my LAN would spoof an email to me. So I read it, and it said "Dear null etc., I know this sounds strange, but I am you, and must warn you (or me, for that matter) that you should not post to /. and get another Score 5, Funny. If you do (and I did, that's why I'm warning you), the consequences will be dire, and the overall quality of the posts on /. will decline."
So I quickly deleted my post and sent this one instead. Now, I'll wait patiently and hope I don't get Score 5, Funny.
Re:Strange coincedence? (Score:1)
So I quickly deleted my post and sent this one instead. Now, I'll wait patiently and hope I don't get Score 5, Funny.
You sure that delete key is working properly?
Re:Strange coincedence? (Score:2)
Re:Strange coincedence? (Score:1)
If your average Slashdotter came across a button that said "DO NOT PRESS, WILL DESTROY UNIVERSE" they would press it just to see if it was connected or not.
Re:Strange coincedence? (Score:2)
I'm also reminded of an old Dr. Who episode with the Daleks. The Doctor asks Davros, creator of the Daleks, if he would really press such a button given the choice. Davros comes back with something like, "To have that kind of power...and not use it? Yes, yes, I believe I would."
Re:Strange coincedence? (Score:2)
Baxter == Blah? (Score:2)
Re:Baxter == Blah? (Score:2)
The characters seemed bland, cardboard, and stereotyped. The basic concept of the book was interesting, though.
I'll probably give Baxter another shot, since people speak highly of him, and I wouldn't want to judge him with one data point.
IMHO, Baxter sucks (Score:2)
I heard people raving about Titan, so I gave it a read.
It was one of the worst books I ever suffered through. Totally unbeliveable plot, uninteresting, cardboard characters, bad, bad science and a deus ex machina ending that made no sense at all. A little bit better than Peter Hamilton-level dreck, but not much.
I've avoided almost all of his stuff since, but the little I've read afterwards hasn't improved my opinion. Can a Baxter fan suggest something that might change my mind?
Re:IMHO, Baxter sucks (Score:1)
The first thing I ever read from him was Time Ships, and rather liked it. I recently read all of the Manifold series (I do not recommend doing this straight through), and was ultimately disappointed. Each book takes you through a bunch of different story threads that...ultimately go nowhere. The lonely humanity in the year 1x10^100, the sentient squid, the blue children, the ET robots, the waves of colonization, the wandering moon...none of them really mesh together. And
Re:Baxter == Blah? (Score:1)
Baxter has awesome ideas but he just totally sucks as an author, his style is bland and uninteresting.
Another nutshell review (Score:3, Interesting)
Exultant, to me, is a story that could read as one of Baxter's masterpieces, if only he got a few more elements right. (Alas, that's not the first time I've thought that of his stories). The narrative often doesn't flow well, sometimes cutting to dry physics lectures, and feeling like a disjoint list of tasks that must be done, filling in time until we make it to the climax, which seems rushed. Also, there seem to me to be some fairly obvious plot holes... for instance, his faster-than-light travel doesn't create time paradoxes except at the beginning of the story, where it's a plot device.
This is only a loose sequel to Coalescent, with some recurring themes. It's a very different book (as you may guess: one is set in Roman Britain and the other is 20,000 years in the future) but it also has a strong focus on hard physics. Some of this is at the expense of the characters... for instance, Baxter really needs to work on his romance writing, or (for preference) leave it out. But the action scenes were done well, and you really get the sense of the vast human empire and the insignifance of one little life.
But the central theme, A brief life burns brightly, is strong, and Baxter explores it well. As usual, he's got plenty of fascinating ideas, like how life may have proliferated in the deep past, causing some events that we've otherwise put down to straight, lifeless physics...
Even after all that? I'm hooked. I'm re-reading the story, and I haven't read anything from the Xeelee Sequence up until now, but that's next on the list.
Re:Another nutshell review (Score:3, Interesting)
Stephen Baxter is amongst the hardest of the hard sci-fi writers.
I'm harder.
Nice Review (Score:2)
Science fiction involving high-tech freedom fighters doesn't usually address the question of what happens after the Death Star blows up. At least in Star Wars we got t
Evolution (Score:1)
Love Baxter, hated Coalescent (Score:3, Interesting)
Coalescent was an extremely frustrating book to read for someone who loves hard sf, speculative and "Golden Years of SF" style philosophical versions like Heinlein, Van Vogt, etc.
After a long time of waiting for the other shoe to drop in Coalescent and the "real" sf story to start, I gave up being bored to tears and worked hard at getting into what was the only "historical" (well historical fantasy) novel I have read since maybe A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court.
I ended up liking the history part but found the ages long saga interminable and stifling . Sure the hive idea was cool but it could have made a series of short stories or a hard sf novel on its own, I thought. Hear's hoping that that is exactly what the new book is. Sounds a bit like Riddick though!
Matt R.
Hive Mind (Score:1)
Inspiration? (Score:1)
Not saying that's a bad thing... in fact, if Baxter has been influenced greatly by someone as wonderful as Stapledon, then the books are probably excellent, and I think I'll check them out.
Re:Get your dates straight (Score:2)