Ratings1
Average rating3
It is carnival time on Mars, but Tabitha Jute isn't partying. She is in hiding from the law, penniless and about to lose her livelihood and her best friend, the space barge "Alice Liddell". Then, the intriguing Marco Metz offers her some money to take him to Plenty, and then the adventure begins.
Winner of both the Arthur C. Clarke Award for best science fiction novel of the year and the British Science Fiction Association Award for best novel of the year--the only book ever to win both prestigious British awards. (from Goodreads.com)
Reviews with the most likes.
Colin Greenland presumably fed on influences such as Samuel Delany and Alfred Bester (and perhaps the film Dark Star), but what he came up with has his own style, his own characters, and his own fairly complex plot.
He's not a great prose stylist (though he does try, sometimes a little too hard); but there's nothing wrong with his imagination, and all he really has to do is to describe what he sees with it; which he can do.
What he sees is the future solar system from the point of view of one of its more lowly inhabitants. Tabitha Jute was born and brought up on the Moon, if you really must know; she doesn't much care to be reminded of it. She has little education and no outstanding abilities. Partly by luck, she's the proud owner of an elderly spacegoing barge with which she ferries freight around the solar system; when she can get a job, that is.
The human race as a whole has been rather demoralized by the arrival of a number of alien races, all with better-than-human technology and some with better-than-human intelligence, but mostly rather unpleasant as individuals. The solar system from Tabitha's point of view is sometimes colourful but often rather squalid, like city life as we know it but more so.
Intrigue is brewing and she gets sucked into it, by accident and entirely against her will, becoming involved with a small troupe of travelling freaks who put on a cabaret act as a front for more shady activities; the true nature of what's going on becomes apparent only very gradually. In the course of her rather painful and uncomfortable adventures, we discover that this very ordinary woman has considerable determination under pressure, is instinctively kind to people when she's not in a bad temper, and comforts her ship—the Alice Liddell—by telling it stories. The ship likes stories, though it would be even more grateful for some urgent repairs and proper maintenance.
Tabitha is slovenly and sometimes rude, but likeable in her own way, and generally believable as a character.
The story is somewhat uneven: there are parts that don't ring true and should have been rewritten. The business with the Capellans near the end reads more like a comic than a novel. However, these are relatively minor flaws. It's a colourful and original work of imagination.
Although I admire the book in principle, I give it only three stars because (a) it does have some defects and (b) in practice I don't enjoy it enough to reread it often.