Starfire (Bantam Spectra Book)
Book details
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBantam Books
- Publication dateNovember 2, 1999
- Dimensions6.5 x 1 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-100553378945
- ISBN-13978-0553378948
Book overview
Earth has been ravaged by galactic disaster--but the real devastation is yet to come.
The year is 2053, and Earth has barely recovered from the Alpha Centauri supernova that destroyed much of the planet's infrastructure. Now the supernova's residual effect--a storm of high-energy particles--is racing toward Earth, and an international effort has been launched out of the Sky City space colony to save the planet. But the controversial plan--to build a giant protective shield for Earth--is falling dangerously behind schedule. A series of unexplained murders has disrupted the Sky City workforce, so much so that a brilliant but monstrous criminal has been enlisted to track down the Sky City killer.
Then comes more startling news. Evidence indicates that the original supernova was caused deliberately, and that the lethal particle storm will arrive sooner than anyone expected. But who--or what--tried to destroy the Earth? And will the answer come in time to save it from its final apocalypse?
Amazon.com Review
Warned by the first catastrophe, Earth began building an electromagnetic shield out of the orbiting Sky City station to divert the incoming apocalypse. But not only will the storm come earlier than expected, the carnage may be worse than anyone imagined--preliminary data shows that the supernova was no accident, and that the wave of particles may in fact be a beam. Crackerjack hard-SF author Charles Sheffield brings back much of the cast of Aftermath for this suspenseful, well-paced follow-up, the two most satisfying returnees being sociopath-savant Oliver Guest and his former patient Seth Parsigian. In the book's subplot, the brilliant Guest and gruff Parsigian must team up to solve a string of grisly child murders on Sky City that threatens to push the shield project even further behind schedule. --Paul Hughes
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
From Kirkus Reviews
Review
--Kirkus Reviews
"Charles Sheffield is one of the very best hard science fiction writers in the world."
--Kim Stanley Robinson
"Sheffield clothes the most advanced speculations of modern science in alluring forms of beauty and danger."
--The Washington Post Book World
Be sure not to miss Charles Sheffield's previous novels:
Tomorrow and Tomorrow:
"This is science fiction in the grand tradition: ambitious, elegiac and ultimately satisfying."
--San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle
"Shares Verne's spirit of scientific adventure that has taken men and women to the bottom of the sea and the other side of the moon and will someday take them to the end of the universe...This is truly a love story of the ages."
--The Orlando Sentinel
Aftermath:
"One of Sheffield's most cleverly plotted and vigorously entertaining works to date."
--Locus
"A major novel from one of the most consistently entertaining writers in the field."
--Science Fiction Chronicle
"Professionally handled and ingeniously extrapolated."
--Kirkus Reviews
From the Inside Flap
Earth has been ravaged by galactic disaster--but the real devastation is yet to come.
The year is 2053, and Earth has barely recovered from the Alpha Centauri supernova that destroyed much of the planet's infrastructure. Now the supernova's residual effect--a storm of high-energy particles--is racing toward Earth, and an international effort has been launched out of the Sky City space colony to save the planet. But the controversial plan--to build a giant protective shield for Earth--is falling dangerously behind schedule. A series of unexplained murders has disrupted the Sky City workforce, so much so that a brilliant but monstrous criminal has been enlisted to track down the Sky City killer.
Then comes more startling news. Evidence indicates that the original supernova was caused deliberately, and that the lethal particle storm will arrive sooner than anyone expected. But who--or what--tried to destroy the Earth? And will the answer come in time to s
From the Back Cover
--Kirkus Reviews
"Charles Sheffield is one of the very best hard science fiction writers in the world."
--Kim Stanley Robinson
"Sheffield clothes the most advanced speculations of modern science in alluring forms of beauty and danger."
--The Washington Post Book World
Be sure not to miss Charles Sheffield's previous novels:
Tomorrow and Tomorrow:
"This is science fiction in the grand tradition: ambitious, elegiac and ultimately satisfying."
--San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle
"Shares Verne's spirit of scientific adventure that has taken men and women to the bottom of the sea and the other side of the moon and will someday take them to the end of the universe...This is truly a love story of the ages."
--The Orlando Sentinel
Aftermath:
"One of Sheffield's most cleverly plotted and vigorously entertaining works to date."
--Locus
"A major novel from one of the most consistently entertaining writers in the field."
--Science Fiction Chronicle
"Professionally handled and ingeniously extrapolated."
--Kirkus Reviews
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
When you have died once, you become most reluctant to do so again.
I had been watching the man since early afternoon, ever since my Alert system detected his presence five and a half miles to the south. He came on foot, much closer to the sea edge than I would ever go. On his back he wore a light knapsack, and in his right hand he held what looked like a solid walking stick. Ten steps to his left the three-hundred-foot cliff dropped sheer to the crawling waters of the Atlantic.
He was in no hurry, pausing from time to time to turn and stare seaward. He might be a solitary and contemplative hiker, wandering the wild west coast of Ireland from Donegal Bay to Tory Sound, admiring the scenery and enjoying his own company. He might; but that hope vanished when at the point of closest approach to the castle he made a sharp right turn and headed straight for it.
I studied him under maximum magnification as he came nearer. He was of middle height and medium build. A strong west wind blew his long hair over his forehead, and that, together with the dark beard and moustache, hid most of his features. There was, surely, nothing about him to make me nervous. Wasn't it reasonable that a walker might ask for a drink of water, or even inquire about accommodation for the night?
It was long years of caution and a determination never again to be captured that speeded my pulse and tingled along my spine.
Above all, do no harm.
Therefore, assume that the man is an innocent stranger, and he will come and go peacefully.
He ignored the scullery entrance, closest to his direction of approach. Instead he walked around the building to the leeward side and found the solid oak door of the main entrance. I am sensitive to loud noises, and I had covered the massive iron door knocker with felt. The triple knock was soft and muffled, as though he knew he was observed and had no need of a loud announcement of his presence.
I opened the door and confirmed my first impressions. Outside the threshold stood a stranger, a man of uncertain age and nondescript clothing, long-haired and full-bearded, four or five inches shorter than me. He was not smiling, but there was an expectant look in his brown eyes.
"Good afternoon," I said. "Can I help you?"
"I don't know about that." He raised dark eyebrows and took a step closer. "But I sure as hell hope so, Doc. Because if you can't, I'm beat to say who can."
The voice and West Virginia accent provided the link, far more strongly than the casual "Doc." It had been twenty-seven years, but I knew who he was--and I knew that he knew me. My instincts shouted, "Kill him!" but instincts are highly unreliable. Moreover, I lack a talent for unpremeditated murder.
Instead I said, "Seth Parsigian. Would you like to come in?"
I did not offer my hand. He nodded, grinned--I would have recognized that smile, after much longer than twenty-seven years--and stepped through into the hallway of gray slate. He stared around him.
"I wondered if you'd recognize me," he said. "Where are the kids?"
"They are away in Sligo, and they will be gone for two days. Furthermore, I cannot believe that you are unaware of that fact."
He winked. "Could be. Not very smart of me, eh? Coming here alone, nobody else around. Might be dangerous. But I don't think it will be. You an' me, we got too much to offer each other."
That short exchange told me several things. He knew about my darlings, and I must assume that he had possessed the information for some time. And he could not be the only one with knowledge of my whereabouts. Seth Parsigian merited several unpleasant adjectives, but stupid was not one of them. His best insurance was that I would realize others knew where he was and would pursue me implacably if he failed to return. He was also telling me, very clearly, that the reason for his presence was not to recapture the infamous child murderer, Dr. Oliver Guest, and return him to the blind cave of centuries of judicial sleep. He was here because he needed something from me.
Otranto Castle is, as castles go, of mean proportions. The short entrance hallway leads to the long dining room, and off to one side of it lies my private study. "Come in," I said, and led the way there. "Come in and sit down."
As I poured whiskey and put the pitcher of peat water beside it, I studied my visitor. My first thought, that he was here because the telomod therapy was failing, did not bear up under examination. Seth Parsigian appeared no older now than when I had last seen him, over a quarter of a century ago. If anything, he was healthier.
But if it were not the telomods, what could I possibly have to offer that might guarantee my continued freedom and safety?
He was examining me as closely as I scrutinized him.
"Looking good." He raised his glass. "Here's to the Oliver Guest telomod protocol. Been taking it yourself, haven't you?"
It was not a question that required an answer. I also appeared no older than at our last meeting. The mystery was that everyone did not employ the protocol. The teratomorphic potential, I suppose, frightened many. Speaking for myself, it interests me little what I may resemble at my death.
"How did you know that I was still alive?" I asked.
"I was pretty sure you weren't killed in the fire. The body we found had dentures. But I didn't have evidence that you weren't dead an' rotting until eleven years ago."
A most comforting statement. He had known of my existence for eleven full years, and I was still a free man.
"How did you learn that I was living, and where I could be found?"
"Oh, through the kids," he said casually. So much for all my precautions. "I figured you'd find a hiding place an' lie low for as long as you could stand, but eventually you'd not be able to resist. You'd get around to cloning 'em. I knew that if you did it one at a time, I'd never find you. But you did all eighteen too close together. I had a long-term screen on the data net for that type of anomaly, and it popped right up with the first six."
"Starting eleven years ago."
"Right." Seth picked up on my unasked question. "So why haven't I turned you in? You can answer that as well as I can."
"Because I am a specialist in telomod therapy, and if I were to be placed again into long-term judicial sleep, you would have no access to my knowledge."
I knew what Seth apparently did not. Although a pioneer--hubris tempts me to say the pioneer--in the techniques of telomod therapy, I left that field many years ago. I have since gone on to new researches, and others have developed protocols less risky and more routine than mine.
"A bit of that, at first." Seth, disdaining peat water, refilled his glass with neat whiskey. "But it's really a lot simpler. Try again, an' let's put it the other way round. Why should I turn you in?"
I considered. With Seth Parsigian there was no need for pretense. "Because I am Oliver Guest, a murderer and monster. Because I killed eighteen teenage children. Because I was sentenced after due process in a court of law to spend six centuries in judicial sleep, and most of that sentence has yet to be served."
"Not my department. Justice wants you, let Justice find you. If they can't, screw 'em. I told you, it's simpler than you think." He leaned forward. "I get you locked up an' iced down, you're gone. History. No way you can ever help me. But I leave you free, you owe me--big-time. If I need help, you can give it to me. An' I'm telling you, Doc, I need help now."
I had been living in western Ireland for twenty-seven years, far from the scientific mainstream. True, I had indulged my own interests and followed progress in related fields through the web, but that did not add up to an ability to serve Seth Parsigian's needs.
However, it would be unwise to suggest that. Instead I said, "I'll be glad to help you. But how?"
"First, you can answer a couple of questions. I'm pretty sure I know the answers, but let's get 'em out of the way. You were a world expert on cloning--don't go modest on me an' deny it. Did you ever clone yourself?"
The idea was so ludicrous that in spite of my internal tensions I snorted with laughter. "Clone myself? Certainly not. Do you think the world is ready for a second Oliver Guest?"
"Not ready for the first one, if you ask me. But I wanted to be sure. You see, I knew you were living here and had been for ages, so cloning was a natural thought."
Not to me. But before I could comment he went on. "All right, tell me this. How much do you know about Sky City and the shield? And have you ever been out there?"
More easy questions, although disquieting ones because of their possible implications. We were moving to an area of expertise where my chances of helping Seth Parsigian were negligibly small. "I know very little about Sky City, and even less about the space shield. Far less, I suspect, than the average interested ten-year-old. I have never been into space, and furthermore I never intend to go there."
"Don't be too sure on that last one. How much have you heard about the deaths in Sky City over the past six months?"
"I have heard not one word. Don't deaths happen all the time during space construction work?"
"Not these deaths. Twelve of 'em. All teenagers. All girls. All beauties. Your personal specialty, an' you've not heard a word? Jeez." Seth stood up and walked through to stare at the dining hall, with its long, solid oak table that we used only when all my darlings were home. "I hope ...
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Features & details
Features
- Used Book in Good Condition
Product information
| Publisher | Bantam Books; First Edition (November 2, 1999) |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Paperback | 416 pages |
| ISBN-10 | 0553378945 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0553378948 |
| Item Weight | 1.15 pounds |
| Dimensions | 6.5 x 1 x 9.25 inches |
| Best Sellers Rank |
#3,709,253 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#158,730 in Science Fiction (Books)
|
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 out of 5 stars 26Reviews |
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Top reviews from the United States
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As a backdrop to this murder mystery (and it IS merely a backdrop), it appears that the Earth may very well perish along with everyone in the space station in the next few days. So we go back and forth from Sherlock-like sleuthing to the impending doom of the planet. It's an incredibly hard balancing act, and for me it didn't succeed. It reminds me of "Independence Day" when, even though aliens have landed and life is certainly never going to be the same, Will Smith's character is despondent because he got another rejection slip from the astronaut program. It's one of those "Huh! " moments that are hard to get past, especially when so much of the book is involved with that particular subplot.
It's always difficult when an author you admire puts out something with which you just can't connect. My advice? Think for yourself. If the book sounds as if it would appeal to you, buy it. If you enjoy it, read more of Mr. Sheffield. But if you didn't enjoy it, don't despair. My advice is the same. Read other books by Mr. Sheffield.
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1. In a hurry, skip "the private diary of Oliver Guest". The Sky City murders were a completely separate story. It seemed they existed simply to reprise a favorite character, but there was no real tie in to the Alpha C story. The motive did not support the crime. The crime did not make any difference to the future of Sky City. The criminal was not publically unmasked so the community was not satisfied. This subplot may have been better resolved in its own book.
2. The main story seemed oddly incomplete. I like a story that is character driven, but I want complete characters. I do not want to wait on a sequel, I want to know now. What happens to the Argos Group? What was Gordy's legacy? Was Nick redeemed? Was Seth redeemed? Did Maddy and John ever hold hands? What happened to other countries and the other world leaders? And who are those people pictured on the book cover?
I have read other novels by Sheffield and this is not the first time that I thought he just stopped writing when the main plot was solved. I would like a little bit more. I need an upbeat ending that is both positive for science and positive for people.
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1) Some characters are marvellous (the noble monster, the detective, the brilliant-but-unrefined australian girl (and is there such thing as a refined australian girl?)); but all characters are over-the-top comic-book caricatures. These are not compellingly believable characters, they are amusing extremes: except where they are actually a detriment to the book (the megalomaniac dwarf, the rediculous secretary) -- then they are not even very amusing.
2) The sexism. Ok, we have a strong woman president, and the scientific genius is a young australian orphan -- how can this be sexist? Well, the sexism is awkwardly evident in that these same strong women reveal themselves to be facades of strength who end up relying on rather shabby looking (morally, socially) males who have an inner iron. It is rather disappointing that one of the main characters, Maddy, turns out to be made of ... nothing. Our woman president ends up doing... nothing. Only the genius comes through.
3) Incredible naivete! We have brilliant scientists and engineers: the other characters marvel at how noble and egoless these communities are. And how they pull together in a crisis, and how they get the job done. Well, engineers need all the glorification they can get, but let me tell you as an insider: it just aint so. Engineers are as petty, as political, as backstabbing as any other human: they just tend not to be very good at it.
4) More naivete! Presidents who travel into the lairs of comic book madmen without secret service; corporations without either beaurocracy or even structure; and did I mention the engineering utopia?
Ok. Those disappointments aside: there are some great characters here, and the counterpoint of the broad historical panorama with the murder mystery plot is marvellous. The murder is compelling throughout (if a little disappointing at the end), while the big picture gains steam throughout, leading to a surprising, satisfying conclusion.
Best of all, the distinct voices that emerge from the various characters, including different, believable senses of humor really make the book. At least among the male characters (and our young australian friend). Too bad the publisher insisted on a different (and annoying) font for the writings of the noble monster -- that was unnecessary.
Overall? Great book for any scifi fan.
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Top reviews from other countries
Alcuni passaggi un poco forzati rendono il libro lento, con poco mordente sul lettore.
Interessante finale.
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