Sunday, March 28, 2010

ENDLESS BLUE, by Wen Spencer

I wish this intriguing book weren't so exhausting due to its multiple themes. I counted at least twenty-eight. Even ANONYMOUS REX, a complex science fiction/noir detective combination reviewed earlier, has perhaps eight themes. FINAL CUT, the Charlie Salter detective novel just reviewed, has even fewer, about four. ENDLES BLUE has five or six gigantic themes, any one of which could almost be a book in itself.

MIKHAIL VOLKOV, an officer in the Novalya Rus, Russian derived union of worlds, investigates the strange appearance of a spaceship engine which returns to normal space without its ship and covered in coral. He desperately needs to find a weapon which can be used against the Nefrim, humanity's genocidal nemesis, and hopes the engine's origin may point the way.

VOLKOV's foster brother TURK, an officer on his ship, is a Red, one of several types of manufactured, "adapted" humans. Adapted humans provoke endless discussion about racism, slavery, sexual exploitation, finding love, etc.

When VOLVOV's ship jumps through a worm-hole, it crashes in a mysterious space ship graveyard world, the SARGASSO. It's an earth-like universe whose ecology is like the South Pacific, with startlingly different physics. PAIGE BAILEY, the captain of a fishing ship, rescues TURK, then struggles with her relationship with him. PAIGES's ability to communicate with multiple alien species is a vital thread in the book.

I really like the book, despite its many flaws. If the measure of success of a writer is the desire he creates to revisit his world, SPENCER succeeds in ENDLESS BLUE. Next time I'll bring a compass and a sextant.

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