Play Book Tag discussion

12 views
April 2020: Science Fiction > Dead Astronauts--Jeff VanderMeer-5 stars

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Michael (new)

Michael (mike999) | 569 comments Thought I'd posted this before, but it didn't take or forgot "save".

VanderMeer comes across with this challenging postapocalyptic tale as a mad genius, a master of atmospheric horror, a wizard of technological imagination, and dark poet of the human will to survive. Three characters find themselves on a barren world in the far future and forge an alliance to defeat “The Company”. Its fortress “City” seems to be some sort of AI juggernaut with incredible powers to marshal all kinds of forces and biocybernetic creatures to protect itself. They have little memory of their lives before, but they recognize each other as a band of brothers which has failed at a comparable quest multiple times before.

Here’s a bit of the windup, which reveals some of the challenges and rewards of reading this book:

Chen was a heavyset man, from a country that was just a word now, with as much meaning as s soundless scream or the place Grayson came from, which didn’t exist anymore either.
Moss remained stubbornly uncommitted—to origin, to gender, to genes, went by “she” this time but not others. Moss could change like other people breathed: without thought, of necessity or not. But Grayson and Chen had their powers too.
…Chen said they had arrived at the City under an evil star, and already they were dying again and knew they had no sanctuary here—only accelerant. But the three had been dying for a long time, and had vowed to make their passage as rough, ugly, and prolonged as possible. They would claw and thrash to their end. Stretched halfway to the infinite.

None of it as beautiful as an equation, though. All of it pushed toward their purpose, for they meant, one of these days, months, or years, to destroy the Company and save the future. Some future. Nothing else meant very much anymore, except the love between them. For glory was wasteful, Grayson believed, and Chen cared nothing for beauty that declared itself, for beauty has no morality, and Moss had already given herself over to a cause beyond or above the human.

“While we’re only human,” Grayson might joke, but it was only because Grayson, of the three, could make that claim.


The many diverse monsters put up against our three rebel saviors are less of a problem than the simulacrums of a wounded duck and a blue fox, which each spin tales in the mind, sell schemes, and push psychological levers that threaten the sanity and solidarity among our heroes. The tale felt sort of like a cross between the Terminator series, the Avengers, and McCarthy’s “The Road,” but all in a trippy lyricism that is unique.

Because I hated the perpetual mystification of the TV series “Lost”, I never took up VanderMeer’s respected “Annihilation” series, fearing endless confusion. Here there is a clear mission of humans vs. machines. Most of the time. He certainly challenges you on your standards for what is still human. Despite their posthuman weirdness and special powers, I could still identify with their capacity for empathy, humor, grief, and loyalty.

Overall, a delightful though wrenching saga of the imagination.


message 2: by Karin (last edited May 02, 2020 04:56PM) (new)

Karin | 9210 comments You did, because I remember replying to it. I wonder what happened?


ETA
I found it far down on the second page https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


message 3: by Michael (new)

Michael (mike999) | 569 comments Karin wrote: "You did, because I remember replying to it. I wonder what happened?..."

Thanks for responding to the first, which I did look closely for and even searched the yag Bookshelf. Not much of a fan of horror, but I appreciate atmospheric suspense and quests against the monstous. His Borne is a next priority rather than Southern Reach.


message 4: by Karin (last edited May 03, 2020 11:14AM) (new)

Karin | 9210 comments Michael wrote: "Karin wrote: "You did, because I remember replying to it. I wonder what happened?..."

Thanks for responding to the first, which I did look closely for and even searched the yag Bookshelf. Not much..."


It can be hard to find posts sometimes! I just remembered responding.


back to top