Sable Aradia
12/8/2016
Read for the Women of Genre Fiction Challenge and the Space Opera Challenge.
The book has received a lot of mixed reviews. I think the big reason why is that no matter what you're expecting, this book is not what you expect. Is it space opera? Well; yes; sort of. Is it cyberpunk? Yeah; that too. Is it a story about the Singularity? Yes; but not entirely. Is it a story about First Contact? That too.
What's the plot? I think the second paragraph of the back of the book summary is probably the best description I could come up with: "Katmer Al Shei, owner of the starship Pasadena, does not know she is carrying a living entity in her ship's computer systems. Or that the electronic network her family helped weave holds a new race fighting for survival. Or that her ship's professional Fool is trying to avert a battle that could destroy entire worlds. And when Al Shei learns the truth, all she'll really know is that it's time to take sides."
What's a professional Fool? Well, in Firefly they have Companions to keep the space travelers sane; in this world they have professional Fools, allowed to go where they want and keep people laughing.
And if I tell you any more than that, I will totally spoil the book for you, because plot and counter-plot and plot twist are the name of the game.
It does take a little while to get going. A lot of time is spent at the beginning of the book fretting and worrying about what the other owner of the ship, Al Shei's no-good brother-in-law, might have done with the Pasadena while it was in his possession (they time-share) and with not much apparently happening. I see that people have gotten impatient with that. Relax; it picks up quickly. All of that is necessary setup. I think that people may have just gotten lazy about reading setup in recent years because we're all used to reading James Patterson novels and Twitter feeds. Stick with it, and you'll find a whole world of wonder opening up to you.
There's so much to like about this book! One of the first things? There are two protagonists. Both are women. The plot would not change much if they weren't. One of these women is a devout Muslim, who blows all the Western stereotypes about Muslim women into the void. This novel doesn't have any issues in passing the Bechdel Test.
Another thing to like is that Al Shei (the Muslim protagonist) is happily married, shows no interest in the male members of her crew, and is a mother, but still travels around the galaxy because that's the nature of her job. The writer, Sarah Zettel, pulls off a very difficult task; she manages to make Al Shei's husband Asil into a significant character whose fate you care about, even though he does not appear in the book more than a handful of times. Also, Zettel succeeds admirably at the John W. Campbell challenge.
Aside from that, it's just really good writing. And good all-around space opera. And hard science fiction, proving that space opera doesn't have to be disguised fantasy.
I see that someone else who reviewed this book was saying that they didn't like it because they were comparing it to Ancillary Justice, and that wasn't fair because "that book was the Exception That Proves the Rule." I assure that reviewer that without Fool's War, which was written in the 1990s, there would not have been an Ancillary Justice. I see why Fool's War is considered such an influential book in science fiction, and as I have many times before, I find myself wondering why it has not won more awards, nor garnered more attention than it has.