Trying
to escape the relentless mechs, the last humans from the planet Snowglade take their ancient starship on a
dangerous course straight into the Eater, the black hole at the galactic center. Hungry and desperate,
the refugees begin to question the leadership of Captain Killeen, who believes the center holds their
one hope of survival. Meanwhile, Killeen's son Toby struggles with the microchips that were implanted
in his spine—a technology that now threatens his sanity. Caught between their genocidal
pursuers and peril in the galactic center, Killeen and Toby bring humanity to its final destiny.
So this chapter in the Galactic Center saga is told from Toby's POV. Life isn't easy for
the son of a captain. He wants to talk son-to-father, but too often it's in front of the crew,
so it winds up sounding like an out-of-line ensign sowing discord. And when it seems like
they're talking father-to-son, Killeen reverts back to captain-to-crew. The reason for that
is Toby is carrying around the personality of his father's dead girlfriend, Shibo, on a chip
mounted into his internal computer system. Killeen claims that it's because she was an
important member of the crew with valuable skills, but Toby thinks Dad just can't let go.
They're both right.
In the hierarchy of dead people stored on computer chips, personalities are at the top. They
take up a lot of memory and, given enough time, can override their host. And that's what
Shibo starts to do.
After a hellish trip through the high energy physics equivalent of Scylla and Charibdis,
the Argo arrives at an odd oasis in some kind of balanced region within the maelstrom,
a bit like a Lagrange Point but with space-time at work instead of gravity. Interacting with
the people there is odd, and there is much confusion between the two parties with the locals
using home field to their advantage rather than trying to help their distant cousins.
In the midst of negotiations, Toby has an outburst which complicates matters. Killeen tosses
him into the brig. When Toby gets word of what transpired in his absence, he feels like he
was setup. Toby runs away with Quath, who acts as a guard/guide. They sneak behind the
proverbial curtain only to fall into what I think were pocket universes of space and time.
Things get a bit strange as Benford plays around with physics at a level I can't pretend to
understand. Toby finds himself on his own, struggling to deal with Shibo's needy disembodied
personality, the weirdness of the landscape he finds himself in, coming of age as an adult,
and being pursued by malevolent entities.
At my age, I'm not really into coming of age stories, but when Benford doesn't make the story
all about Toby, it holds up. The exploration of around the galactic center made for some
entertaining reading. I wouldn't have minded more of that. But I struggled with the physics
involved getting near the core and Toby's explorations at the oasis. The conflicts are kind
of resolved, but not really, and the ending is something of a cliffhanger. Still, if you've
made it this far into the series, you have to go all the way.
3.75 stars
\_/
DED