Difference between revisions of "The Quiet War"
(Created page with "'''McAuley, Paul. ''The Quiet War''.''' London: Gollancz, 2008. New York: Pyr, 2009.[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?831546] Reviewed by Ed Higgins in ''SFRA Review''...") |
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A 23rd-century Earth despotically ruled by powerful family oligarchies has embarked on restoring centuries-ago ravaged environmental systems through massive technoreclamation projects employing a near-enslaved populace. [...] | A 23rd-century Earth despotically ruled by powerful family oligarchies has embarked on restoring centuries-ago ravaged environmental systems through massive technoreclamation projects employing a near-enslaved populace. [...] | ||
− | ''The Quiet War'' clearly reflects a debt to such technowar novels as Heinlein’s ''[[Starship Troopers]]'' and Haldeman’s ''[[The Forever War]]''. There’s also a recasting of Orson Scott Card’s ''[[ | + | ''The Quiet War'' clearly reflects a debt to such technowar novels as Heinlein’s ''[[Starship Troopers]]'' and Haldeman’s ''[[The Forever War]]''. There’s also a recasting of Orson Scott Card’s ''[[Ender's Game]]'' training school for young technowarriors. In ''The Quiet War'', on Earth’s moon, specially designed boy-clones are secretly trained for subversive missions [...]. And fighter pilots are also being secretly trained using advanced human–machine interface “singleships” outfitted with special weaponry for the inevitable war. |
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
So: Obviously relevant for familiar high-tech warfare and that "human-machine interface," but also a newer theme of "technoreclamation" for humans and machines acting on the environment. | So: Obviously relevant for familiar high-tech warfare and that "human-machine interface," but also a newer theme of "technoreclamation" for humans and machines acting on the environment. | ||
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+ | Sequel: ''[[Gardens of the Sun]]'' (Amherst: Pyr, 2010), reviewed by Ed Carmien, ''SFRA Review'' #291 (Winter 2010): pp. 18-19.[http://sfra.org/resources/sfra-review/291.pdf]. | ||
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+ | Listed with primary title "Reef" in Benford and Zebrowski's ''[[Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science]].'' | ||
Latest revision as of 20:58, 16 June 2022
McAuley, Paul. The Quiet War. London: Gollancz, 2008. New York: Pyr, 2009.[1]
Reviewed by Ed Higgins in SFRA Review #290 (Fall 2009): p16.[2]
The Quiet War combines elements of space opera, terraforming colonization, future technowar, ecocatastrophe and sociopolitical fantasy [...].
A 23rd-century Earth despotically ruled by powerful family oligarchies has embarked on restoring centuries-ago ravaged environmental systems through massive technoreclamation projects employing a near-enslaved populace. [...]
The Quiet War clearly reflects a debt to such technowar novels as Heinlein’s Starship Troopers and Haldeman’s The Forever War. There’s also a recasting of Orson Scott Card’s Ender's Game training school for young technowarriors. In The Quiet War, on Earth’s moon, specially designed boy-clones are secretly trained for subversive missions [...]. And fighter pilots are also being secretly trained using advanced human–machine interface “singleships” outfitted with special weaponry for the inevitable war.
So: Obviously relevant for familiar high-tech warfare and that "human-machine interface," but also a newer theme of "technoreclamation" for humans and machines acting on the environment.
++++++++++++++++++++
Sequel: Gardens of the Sun (Amherst: Pyr, 2010), reviewed by Ed Carmien, SFRA Review #291 (Winter 2010): pp. 18-19.[3].
Listed with primary title "Reef" in Benford and Zebrowski's Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science.
RDE, finishing, 25Feb21