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Author:
Robert Charles Wilson
Publication
Date: Apr.
2005
Publisher:
Tor Books
352
pages
Buy
it on Amazon
Summary
One night in
October, the stars disappear from the sky.
In
a Nutshell
A powerful,
yet quiet SF novel, combining a deeply humanistic story with mind-boggling
SF concepts.
Review
Spin,
Robert Charles Wilson's latest, is a very rare treat indeed: a SF
novel, based on extravagant and mind-boggling SF concepts, which
still manages to tell a very human story filled with emotions and
character development.
For Wilson fans
(and I count myself among them), there is nothing dramatically new
in terms of themes and focus in Spin. Wilson, once again,
manages to tell the story of one man on the grandiose canvas of
humanity as it comes to grips with an insane, uncomprehensible event.
Spin shares a lot of points with Wilson's earlier work,
The Chronoliths, and if you've read that one, Spin
will seem strangely familiar.
As much as I
loved The Chronoliths and Darwinia, however, Spin
strikes me as a superior novel on almost any point. The story strongly
focuses on Tyler Dupree and his relationship with twins Jason and
Diane, providing a rich human element filled with drama and tension,
which I felt was stronger than in The Chronoliths. Wilson
has an amazing gift of writing entirely believeable emotions and
character development tied with unbelieveable SF events, and in
Spin, he is at his strongest.
The SF event
at the core of Spin is truly a mind-boggling one: what
if, one night, all the stars and the moon disappeared from the sky?
How would humanity adjust to such an implausible event? What would
be the causes of this? Who could possibly do this and why? To say
any more about it would risk spoiling truly exciting moments. Let
me simply say that, throughout the first 100 pages, I actually gasped
in shock at some of the revelations and mind-boggling concepts put
forth by Wilson.
The SF events
that take place throughout the course of Spin are, believe
it or not, on par with Stephen Baxter's better
outlandish ideas. What sets Wilson's work leagues ahead, however,
is the way he somehow manages to juggle big concepts with a future
history of humanity, and by rooting everything in a personal, emotional
story of one man trying to make sense of the world.
There are some
flaws with this novel: Wilson has a tendency to try and wrap up
his stories very neatly, and to me, that takes away from the novel.
(See Darwinia and Blind Lake for examples.) Also,
I felt the chapters taking place in the "present" (as
opposed to retellings by the main character) gave away many surprises
of the story, and didn't add a lot of foreshadowing. After a while,
I found myself wishing these chapters could be over as quickly as
possible, although that is to the credit of the main story, and
not so much a fault of these chapters.
Regardless,
Spin is possibly Wilson's best novel to date (although
I am a huge fan of The Chronoliths), and it proves once
and for all that big SF concepts do not have to come packaged in
shoddy writing and paper-thin protagonists. Here's hoping the Stephen
Baxters of this world are listening.
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