Sujet : Re: Recent good reads
De : noone (at) *nospam* nowhere.com (Titus G)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.writtenDate : 04. Jun 2025, 06:57:37
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <101on87$kavd$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 8/03/25 10:15, -dsr- wrote:
Stuff I liked:
snip
Suzanne Palmer: the Finder quadrilogy.
Finder (2019)
Driving the Deep (2020)
The Scavenger Door (2021)
Ghostdrift (2024)
These are spectacular space opera, as reasonably self-consistent as we can allow
for a fictional universe with at least three methods of FTL travel. Our
protagonist, who is nearly a hero, is Fergus Fergusson, or perhaps Jon James or
Bill Baugh or any number of other alliterative temporary identities. He is
self-employed as a retriever of lost things - starships, kidnap victims, alien
artifacts - and has a remarkably bad time doing so. But the universe also grants
him a ridiculous amount of luck -- that is his key stat. Palmer plays fair with
her audience: anything that Fergus relies on is explained in advance.
Unfortunately for him, his plans aft gang aglay before finally resolving.
I began "Finder" but did not finish it. Perhaps I would have enjoyed it
if I had read it after something from a different genre but I had just
finished a reread of the five book Exordium space opera by Sherwood
Smith and Dave Trowbridge and the contrast was too great. Exordium was
so rich in poetic metaphor, had so many varying protagonists and unique
characters, and was missing lots of detail to keep the reader alert.
Finder, (keep in mind that I read less than a third), was about a single
protagonist whose thoughts and actions were explained in straightforward
detail with no pseudo science, limited world building and the story
beginning with a completely implausible situation. The humour did not
appeal to me. I don't have any serious criticism; it was just not to my
taste at the time.