
Title: Revelation Space
Pages: 480
Publisher: Ace 2001
Series/Related titles: Chasm City (2002) Redemption Ark (2003), Absolution Gap (2004), Diamond Dogs, Turquoise (2 novella’s 2003)
Revelation Space is my first time being exposed to Alastair Reynolds, and his full length novel debut. As such, it comes with the flaws or characteristics we would normally associate with a first novel. What is not as common; as we Science Fiction fans (or Speculative Fiction as a whole) fans can attest to, is that within the pages of Revelation Space there is enough sign of effacious, and compelling writing and ideas to warrant a desire to look into subsequent works by the author (reading Chasm City now).
In the beginning portions of Revelation Space, the theme is one of alternation. Reynolds starts off with 3 POV’s, all in different locales, and within these POV’s we will also experience shifts in time which the reader will do well to in the headers of the chapters, so not to get the where and when mixed up. Due to these elements at the novels start, I have seen some describe novel in a negative sense as disjointed, a notion I disagree with it - it is, however, annoying. I didn’t find it difficult in the least to comprehend what was going on, nor was I in the least bit in danger of getting “lost”. In fact, I truly appreciated this portion of the novel as later in the storyline the 3 POV characters share essentially the same setting, thus the beginning of the novel affords the reader more diversity, in both examples of description, and of character development based not on what will become later in the novel the central-shared experience, which although is interesting, at times doesn’t justify or warrant such attention - it just felt a little excessive in my latter reading.
The 3 POV characters are Dan Sylveste, Ana Khouri, and Ilya Volyova. Sylveste, whose life work as an archaeologist, is centered on the study of the Amarantin, a mysterious avarian species, who once inhabited the planet he and a community of humans do currently, Resurgam. Sylveste’s specific interest in the Amarantin is the study of the species’ last days, brought on by what is termed “Event”. Even with the other aforementioned POV’s who get ample time, Sylveste is the chief character of the novel, and it would be a drastic understatement to describe Sylveste as merely passionate about his goals; it would still be such, to say he was relentlessly tenacious, and resolute in his adamant, manoaniacal, quest to unravel the mystery.
Meanwhile, Ana Khouri, a former soldier with a rising reputation as an assassin, receives a Brando like offer. The early chapters with Khouri are among the ones I enjoyed the most, as through her we get a glimpse of the backdrop of Chasm City, and although Reynolds show a habit of untimely overloads with information concerning significant plot points that effected the novels pacing - just as many times, however, Reynolds exhibited admirable descriptive ability:
“Once those skyscrapers had looked linear and symmetrical, until the plague made them grow madly, sprouting bulbous protrusions and tangled, leprous appendages. The buildings were all dead now, frozen into the shapes which seemed calculated to induce disquiet. Slums adhered to their sides, lower levels lost in a scaffolded maze of shanty towns and ramshackle bazaars, aglow with naked fires”.
Admittedly, nobody is going to mistake the passage for a description of some segment of New Crobuzon, but it’s not dilettantish either. Albeit too brief, I also enjoyed the look into a part of the society of Chasm City we are privy to. As mentioned, Khouri is an assassin in a city where it’s none to uncommon to get contracted by the proposed victim themselves, and where a large number of the wealthy continually slept in cryocrypts, waiting for a more fashionably appealing time to wake and continue there life, I was quite pleased to find out another work by Reynolds was called Chasm City , as its description peaked my interest. Khouri infiltrates a lighthugger (spaceship), The Infinity, under the guise guised as someone looking for potential work to fulfill a mission, and in doing so hopes to restore a lost love and her past..
The third character is Volyova, an ultra, who along with being one of the three ranking members of a ship, is essentially the Infinity’s (the ship) weaponsmaster, which is nothing to scoff at as the Infinity’s armaments include thousands of weapons many of which are more then capable of wiping out planets; that said some of the more powerful ones have not even been tested. Ultra’s are humans who revel in self-enhancements, whether blatant in nature regards, or unseen, Ultra’s have become quite a bit more then what other humans have ascended to. The Infinity’s command crew (including Volyova) is called the Triumvir, currently being led by Sajaki, one of the most maddening characters in Revelation Space, because there are moments one would think this is the character that will give the story the extra edge, by either direct action or offer some revelation, but we have to settle for what in reality can be described as a series of wonderful cameo appearances.
“A figure stood there, majestically silhouetted in the glare. The man was garbed in a black anklelength cloak and a vaguely defined helmet, the light making it resemble a halo cast around his head. His profile was split diagonally by a long smooth stick which he gripped two-handedly”“The Komuso stepped into the darkness. What looked like a kendo stick was only his shakuhachi; a traditional music instrument. With well-rehearsed rapidity he slid the thing into a sheath concealed behind the folds of his cloak. Then with imperial slowness, he removed the wicker helmet. The Komuso’s face was difficult to make out. His hair was brillaintined, slickly tied back in a scythe-shaped tail. His eyes were lost behind sleek assassin’s goggles, infared sensitive facets dully catching the room’s tinted light”.
Sajaki is in command due to the Captain of the ship being infected by a particularly nasty virus that is actively melding him with the ship, a terminal process slowed down by freezing, yet not stopped. The Triumvir are searching the galaxy for the man that helped their captain before, the only man that has the means to do so…Sylveste.
Its really not a lacking premise, and Reynolds ties plotlines together between the POV”s quite well, although the hint of being contrived in some cases is present. After reading Revelation Space, I came away mindful of a lot of flaws: an abundance of peripheral characters who truly served no viable, story enhancing purpose, the dialog at times leaves something to be desired, often used as the vehicle for the aforementioned info dumps, and lastly, something that is usually a death blow, not only to any chance of me not condemning an author and my ability to enjoy a novel, or more aptly future novels by an author, Reynolds has a irritating and recurring habit of gifting his characters with “revelations’ regarding plot circumstances that he doesn’t feel inclined to privy the reader with simultaneously, forcing the reader to wait until the character announces it. (often times in one of the mentioned info dumps). Used sparingly it is an effective literary tool - but in Revelation Space it is too standard. All that withstanding, and I might add surprisingly so, I still came away with overall positive opinion of the novel, and more than a mild interest to read Reynold’s other work.
Reading the cover flap will reveal that Alastair Reynolds has a PHD in Astronomy, and although Reynolds goes into wonderful detail about the history of civilization in the universe, and has just enough technical language and invention to please fans of hard science fiction, Revelation Space is still accessible by most readers, not swaying from its Space Opera basis, yet at the same time offering characters that are not polarized in their nature, and reduced to extreme examples of archetypes. That said the characterization isn’t ideal, but it is more then adequate. Reynolds has some ideas which are just truly imaginative, populating the universe with concepts like Lascaille’s Shroud, a impenetrable boundary, of unknown origin and purpose that drives intruders mad if not simply killing them, named after the one man who had returned alive. The Pattern Jugglers, an aquatic species (literally), who if you swim in the oceans of their home planet, and depending on what your are focusing on in your mind can modify your minds, amplifying some abilities. Reynolds also gives us a provocative answer why intelligent civilizations aren’t as numerous as perhaps they should be. One of the aspects that makes Sylveste interesting is his “beta copy” of his father he has access to, and calls upon for advice at times, which in itself provides for some engaging conversation as although there is a level of mutual respect between them, the father and son relationship is not always the most civil. Another mystery, the sentient intruder aboard the Infinity, whose named was found both from archeological studies of Sylveste, and scribed amongst the possessions of a possessed madman Volyova was forced to kill.
As mentioned, Revelation Space despite its flaws, offered more than enough evidence of competency as a debut novel, and some instances of an intriguing imagination to extend my reading of Mr. Reynold’s work to at least one more book. An opinion that has been proven to be a correct one, as I wrap up my reading of his next work Chasm City , a novel that improves upon, at least in some degree all the elements that I felt were lacking, or needed tuning up in Revelation Space.
Definitely a recommendable effort into a sometimes unjustly (certainly not all the time however) much maligned sub-genre; Reynold’s work along with a few other relatively current works by authors like John C. Wright, Peter F. Hamilton, Charles Stross, David Brinn, Brian Aldiss and Ian Banks, not only already bringing irrefutable respectability to Space Opera’s again, but threaten in some cases (Banks) to set benchmarks of their own.
Revelation Space, is worth a strong look, as is Reynolds, not flawless by any means, but promising and oddly compelling, despite its flaws.
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1 Bookspot Round-up 7/10/08 // Jul 10, 2008 at 4:18 am
[...] Val reviews Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds. Check out my own review here at the Bod! Val also get his Nightshade on reviewing Pump Six and other stories, a collection by Paolo [...]
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