Alien Influences | |||||||||||||||
Kristine Kathryn Rusch | |||||||||||||||
Bantam Spectra Books, 416 pages | |||||||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Worse luck! The Salt Juice may not be as harmless as its press
insists. And it appears the Dancers are killing the children in a
form of maturation ritual. At the appropriate point, remove a Dancer
youth's heart, lungs, and hands, and the regenerated parts make the
alien an adult. Do the same to a human child and, well, it dies.
Justin Schafer, xenopsychologist, has been sent to Bountiful ostensibly
to learn the reason for the slayings and recommend a course of
action. The colony's leaders want the Dancers dealt with
immediately. Schafer's a bit more cautious; on his last assignment,
he mistakenly brought about the extinction of another sentient race.
The investigation leads Schafer to study the remaining, apparently
unconcerned children, and their relationship with the graceful,
gentle Dancers. What he discovers pleases no one, especially the
Bountiful bureaucrats. The killers are actually the remaining
children; make use of the maturation ritual and become an
adult. But the process didn't work.
More horrifying is the realization that the bureaucrats knew, and
planned to use the incident to wipe out the Dancers. The secret of
the highly addictive Salt Juice is theirs now, and they see no
reason to share the wealth with aliens.
Based on Schafer's report, the planet is abandoned, the children
taken from their addicted parents, and travel to Bountiful
outlawed. Revolted by the murders, appalled by the unexplainable
death of one of the five, but more frightened of Dancer-"infected"
children, the authorities whisk the children away to separate penal colonies.
Years after the sentences are completed, John, the leader of the group
accepts an assignment for a strange bounty that brings him into
contact with a genie-like being and sets him off on a quest to
locate his friends. The search takes him from salt mines to
inter-species brothels and, finally, back to the planet that haunts him.
What he finds along the way brings him pain, shocking discoveries,
and a strange reunion, but will it bring him peace?
Rusch isn't here on this Earth to hand out easy answers. Alien Influences
is, like all her work, memorable, enthralling, and just a touch frustrating;
there are always more questions after the final page. And there is no final word.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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