Ratings7
Average rating4.1
The Executives control Oichi's senses, her voice, her life. Until the day they kill her. An executive clan gives the order to shoot Oichi out of an airlock on suspicion of being an insurgent. A sentient AI, a Medusa unit, rescues Oichi and begins to teach her the truth--the Executives are not who they think they are. Oichi, officially dead and now bonded to the Medusa unit, sees a chance to make a better life for everyone on board. As she sets things right one assassination at a time, Oichi becomes the very insurgent the Executives feared, and in the process uncovers the shocking truth behind the generation starship that is their home.
Reviews with the most likes.
Absolutely brilliant worldbuilding and relatable characters.
Colony ship in the depths of space on a long-term journey (to destination unknown!)
Stratification of classes.
Machiavellian schemes.
Brutal deaths.
Mysterious figures.
Living technology.
Such a wonderfully dark book.
I loved the premise: a generation ship in a 100 years voyage to a new place, augmented humans, classical music references, lots of visits to airlocks, a rebellion, deep sleep units and awesome semi organic-semi synthetic artificial intelligent units, called Medusas.
There is a class struggle between the Executives (the privileged class who groups into Clans) and the rest...the “worms”.
It's a little bit disturbing because the “worms” working as Slaves are practically re-engineered to serve the Executives and they can control what the Slaves can see, hear and smell. But the protagonist, Oichi, has an advantage: a high tech implant that her parents gave her so she can see and do things no other Slaves can.
There was one aspect that I disliked thorough the story: the passages about the Executive's parties and their political power / political influence conundrums. I wanted to see Oichi having more fun, she sounded so focused on her mission and I felt a little depressed about the life she had.
Pros: fascinating characters, excellent world building, layered mysteries
Cons:
Oichi Angelis is a murderess and conspirator upon the generation spaceship Olympia. Using a Medusa unit, she's been taking out key members of the Executive class. But the Executives aren't the only threats to her mission to overturn the ship's rigid class system.
The back cover synopsis for this book calls Oichi a ‘worm', which I'd misinterpreted as meaning she was either a computer program or A.I. of some sort. So I was surprised to discover she was a human, and that ‘worm' was a slur for low level people on the ship. Oichi is a fascinating character, who's completely unapologetic about the live's she's taken (who are mostly horrible people), that you can't help but like her. In many ways it's her connection with Medusa, a partly biological machine, that allows her to be such a good assassin.
The world-building is great. The author manages to explain the ship's history in ways that felt organic but not intrusive. For example, there's a scene where Oishi is pretending to study for school while she's actually doing something else. So the narrative is interrupted by occasional digressions of the video that's playing on her screen. At other times we learn about the ship as she does, especially with regards to the executives and their dealings.
There are several overlapping mysteries, all introduced in layers. One mystery is a snippet of conversation Oishi overhears as a child. As she grows up she tries to understand what the Executives were saying, but her interpretation changes as she learns more and more.
Chapters are written in a circuitous way, starting with foreshadowing of what's going to happen, then a linear narrative leading back to what was hinted at or stated earlier. I was impressed at how well the author managed to guide you through the narrative. There was only one spot where I was confused about when an event happened, and that was cleared up quickly. As Oichi learns more about one mystery, others - so many others - come to light. The book keeps you guessing about everyone's motivations.
I really enjoyed this and can't wait for the next book.
Series
2 primary booksThe Medusa Cycle is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2018 with contributions by Emily Devenport.