| The Engine of Recall | ||||||||
| Karl Schroeder | ||||||||
| Robert J. Sawyer Books, 271 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Rich Horton
The first thing that struck me about the Table of Contents was the relative unfamiliarity of most of the stories. This
was a source of mild embarrassment to me, as I consider myself generally very up to date on short SF. It turns out that
one engine of the "Canadian Renaissance" I mentioned above has been some Canadian outlets for SF, most notably the
magazine On Spec and the anthology series Tesseracts, that to some extent slip under the radar
of often US- and/or UK-centric SF readers. So Schroeder managed to publish a passel of first-rate stories without
generating quite the buzz he deserved -- though one story here, "The Dragon of Pripyat", was reprinted in Gardner
Dozois' The Year's Best Science Fiction, Seventeenth Annual Edition, and another, "Halo", was chosen for David
Hartwell's anthology The Hard SF Renaissance.
Well, that's one reason for story collections -- to
bring to light stuff that might have been missed on first publication. And the stories here are well worthy of this
exposure. Take "The Dragon of Pripyat." Gennady Malianov is a morose Russian (or Ukrainian) man hired to investigate
a threat to release radioactive material from the remains of Chernobyl. Malianov heads directly to the ghost town
of Pripyat. There he meets a curious squatter, and also encounters the mysterious "dragon." He and a remote friend
figure out the somewhat mundane (though interesting) nature of the dragon -- the heart of the story, though is the
paradoxical landscape of Pripyat. Malianov turns up again in the collection's only original, "Alexander's Road." This
time the threat is some missing nuclear warheads in Azerbaijan.
Malianov's investigation, however, turns up a couple of further, even scarier, nuclear threats.
One of my favorite stories here is "Halo", set in the same future as Schroeder's novel Permanence. Elise
Cantrell is a resident of Dew, a planet of Crucible, a brown dwarf star. Dew has just managed to install an
artificial "sun," but this hopeful step is endangered when Elise discovers a message from a hijacked ship, taken
over by fanatics who plan to destroy the fragile colony on Dew. She forges a tenuous relationship with one of the
original crew of the hijacked ship, but they both know the only ultimate hope for Dew is to destroy the attacking
ship, complete with innocent crew members as well as hijackers. This is an excellent example of a moving human
story essentially set in an exotic, purely SFnal, environment. Another such story, not quite as successful but
still enjoyable, is "The Pools of Air," in which a crew filming in Jupiter's atmosphere are placed in peril by a
freak accident to their ship. "The Cold Convergence" is also set in the outer Solar System, this time on Saturn's moon Titan.
A psychologist is hired to try to treat a man who has just wandered alone into the Titanian wilderness. The
interesting story of the man is undermined a bit by an implausible resolution involving unconvincing real estate laws.
"Making Ghosts" is an interesting story about pioneers in transferring human consciousness to computers, while "The
Engine of Recall" involves using such "ghosts" to pilot spaceships in such dangerous environments as the neighborhood
of a neutron star.
"Allegiances" tells of a woman in war-torn former Yugoslavia who is cursed by the ability rob other people of the
facial recognition sense. An intriguing idea that I don't think the story quite used well. "Hopscotch" is a rather
Fortean story, in which the narrator is in love with a woman obsessed with statistical analysis of unusual events
such as UFO sightings and raining fish. "Solitaire" tells of a young human criminal who manages to be "adopted"
as sort of an interpreter by a solitary, uncommunicative, alien. The ending nicely violates traditional SFnal
expectations.
It is clear to readers of Karl Schroeder's novels that he is a fascinating writer of Hard SF. The short stories
in The Engine of Recall showcase that imagination effectively -- strong stories that aren't afraid to be
adventure stories while also portraying cool ideas.
Rich Horton is an eclectic reader in and out of the SF and fantasy genres. He's been reading SF since before the Golden Age (that is, since before he was 13). Born in Naperville, IL, he lives and works (as a Software Engineer for the proverbial Major Aerospace Company) in St. Louis area and is a regular contributor to Tangent. Stop by his website at http://www.sff.net/people/richard.horton. |
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