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Undertow: A Novel

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Book Overview

A frontier world on the back end of nowhere is the sort of place people go to get lost. And some of those people have secrets worth hiding, secrets that can change the future-assuming there is one. .... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Impressive!

I had been wondering if hard SF was dead, but it seems alive and kicking into new worlds and futures in this book. There is a LOT going on, packed into non-stop action. There's Andre who makes a living as an assassin (someone has to do it--it's just a job, no worse than most). There's Cricket, Andre's girlfriend, an archinformist (a data-miner of the ubiquitous headsets and data holds). There are conjures and licensed coincidence engineers, those who can manipulate probabilities by observing them in a certain way, something that runs in Andre's family and something he aspires to rather than his job. There is the instant transmission of matter, but not of living things (since being able to observe it messes up the transmission). There's Earth and the Core worlds and then the wild Rim, where Green's World is located--absolutely ruled by the Charter Trade Company with a vested interest in exporting a resource that is mined by the no-tech (and therefore exploitable by law) natives, the water-based ranids or "froggies." There is the floating city of Novo Haven, with its lashed-together barges and wired inhabitants. There are the wild bayous with the ranids and perhaps some ranid revolutionaries and the Greens and humans who are pro-ranids. There is ranid physiology and communication and society. And there is the situation where the Company wants someone with sensitive information to be killed and Andre figures he should do it since it'll be either him or someone else--even though the target turns out to be his lover Cricket's friend, Lucienne, who is the girlfriend of a conjure who Andre had hoped to convince to teach him... If that's not enough to begin with, then don't read this book. It just gets crazier from there. Add in explosions and agents and rebels and retaliatory massacres and possible genocide and probability storms... There is not a dull minute in this book.

Keeps your eyeballs popping!

Elizabeth Bear's Undertow (a Philip K. Dick award finalist) is the book that fulfilled what I want in a book - it crystallized my amorphous ideas about what I wanted and literally showed me - it's eyeball-popping finale really melded the book into a cohesive whole, tied up the loose ends, and gave me the thrill I needed. As an author, she has always satisfied me (her Jenny Casey trilogy), but in this book she was in top form - it's semi-mystical beginnings, unsavory characters, and odd, Louisiana Bayou Company Town setting, plus a very unusual alien species, made the beginning questionable - what have I gotten my self into? Were Hammered, Scardown, and Worldwired a fluke - was that all she had? Well, Undertow answered that with a resounding NO! One thing that stood out was that she used a different type of future - a non-Singularity future, which I enjoyed. So much SF these days, when dealing with the Far Future, uses that. But it is filled with lots of high-tech - wearables, the connex mentioned. Basically everyone, except a few who chose to live "off the grid" so to speak, are completely wired in - they get instant news, houses are responsive and security runs high. And the way the whole city/town can just pick up and move is sooo different. Even the aliens are (the information is dribbled out over the course of the novel) inventive and use all the possible elements that can be done - nothing about them are giant lizards, or talking trees. There has been some negative comparisons to The Secret, because, as she is not a quantum engineer, her explanations of some of it's aspects used in the book are minimal - but as both a Hard SF nutcase, AND an under science-educated reader, it hit a chord - I loved not being overwhelmed with technical detail, but still be able to "follow" the idea behind the quantum theory, which is one of the reasons I got into Hard SF - Baxter's Manifold: Space was full of mind-boggling stuff, and although I didn't understand it all, I didn't have to - the mere idea that these things exist, or are theorized to exist, is enough to set your world on end. Some reviews have focused on the use of the probability futures, and it's cursory explanations - they want more detail. I, on the other hand, don't need that - I just need the author to set me on the path, and get me fired up, and off I go. I LIKE not being in a lecture hall, but instead, given ideas that make me THINK, and want to run to my nearest Hawking book, or other QM one, and do some research on my own. Too much detail strays the story off it's path, IMO. Undertow set the bar quite high for me, which is probably why I've been so hard on A Fire Upon the Deep by Vinge. This book makes the others look amateurish, dull, wordy and unimaginative. Undertow accomplishes in it's short (368) pages, what AFUTD (624) couldn't do in almost twice the length. I urge you to give it a try - if you've read the Casey trilogy, it's nothing like it. This is NOT your grandmother's boo

Not Free SF Reader

Best book yet. At least of her science fiction, anyway, I haven't read the rest. It seems that not content with being the 21st century Gordon R. Dickson with Military SF and Dragons, or the 21st century Randall Garrett with period sorcerer detectives, monster hunters, and animal companions, she is aiming for the 21st century Melissa Scott niche, too. That is exactly what this book reminded me of, being instantly dumped into a milieu that is both recognisably human and alien, and just different, right from the start. This is something that Scott is great at, and showing the day to day situations of such people in the future and on other planets. Quantum probabilities is what this is all about, as one particular planetary colony is a source for a very strange substance that facilitates interstellar communication and transport by quantum methods. Naturally, this makes the corporation in control a lot of money. They use the local amphibious aliens as workers, 'coolies' mostly in fact as well as name to mine this substance, as they work well in the water. The case of characters includes a hitman, a Scarlet Witchesque probability manipulator, an information broker, a secret agent, and your standard repressive corporate executives, and a few clones. When one of these people is killed, the dying information burst she sends begins to uncover a lot of secrets, and leads to a complicated conflict involving the aliens, the locals, the governing corporation, and more than one probability storm. Very well done. 4.5 out of 5

Hard SF with a conscience

"Undertow," the latest novel from the amazingly creative Elizabeth Bear, packs sin, redemption, virtual reality, probability and statistics, quantum physics, and Borgesian forking paths into its 332 pages. There are floating cities, intelligent amphibians, killers who want to learn to manipulate reality, and, oh yes, instant transmission of matter, but not living matter--or is there? And did I mention the clones? Its nominal hero, Andre, is a hired assassin who kills the best friend of his girlfriend Cricket in a contract hit. She knows it's him, but nevertheless she and her male colleague, Jean, help the ambitious Andre learn to be a "god botherer"--somebody who can manipulate probability. That's easy enough to do on this planet. What's harder to do is instill some sort of conscience in Andre. The story's plot revolves around whether he will in time acquire one. The author, as is her style, uses multiple povs to develop her story. We view things at different times through the eyes of Andre, Cricket, Jean, the amphibians known as ranids or "froggies" (think "wogs"), and agents of the vicious corporation that controls the planet (think the British East India Company of the 19th century). In lesser hands, a tale like this could easily spin out of control, but fortunately Ms. Bear doesn't let this happen, and the last quarter of the book is quite astonishing. It isn't all that much of a stretch to compare some of its passages with Joseph Conrad's. A must read.

Fans will appreciate this watery science fiction thriller

On the backwater colony and mining planet Greene's world, a mostly oceanic orb, the Charter Trade Company mines petroleum and omelite, a valuable substance controlled by the firm's upper management. Native ranids who are civilized water species are used as forced coolie labor. They live mostly in water so they play a big role in the underwater mining. Sometimes a secret gets out and the company has to deal with it. Andre Deschenes is an assassin who wants to be a conjurer man so he can scientifically change his world and control to a degree the probable outcome of events. The company assigns him to kill Lucienne, his girlfriend Cricket's friend. Some ranids with humans backing them are calling for a revolution and Cricket has a data dump in her head from Lucienne, given moments before she died that may be the key to getting the company off Greene's World. The ranids know more than humans believe possible and are prepared to do what is necessary to keep their world whole healthy and clean. The ranids are intelligent amphibians but most humans don't see it because verbal communication between the species is impossible. UNDERTOW would make a great movie as human corporate conspiracies place everyone on or near the planet in danger; human and ranids try to save their destabilizing planet. Fans will appreciate this watery science fiction thriller Harriet Klausner
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