Lost worlds and ports of call

Glasshouse

The real reason I logged on was to mention Charles Stross’s novel, Glasshouse, a Prometheus Award finalist. I finished the novel today, and am now 3/5 of the way through the finalists. Until reading this novel I did not see a strong candidate, but now I have one, and it probably will take a lot for the next two novels on the list to change my mind. Next up, John Scalzi’s The Ghost Brigades. I’ve heard a lot of good stuff about Scalzi, but this is his first novel I’ve had the opportunity to read, so I’m looking forward to it. My only complaint about Glasshouse is that Stross seems to have spent a lot of time inside the head of his Merchant Princes series’ main character, and she sort of jumped into another novel. The protagonist of Glasshouse is female for most of the novel, and acts and talks exactly like a Miriam Beckstein template. I feel like my head needs a cool plunge into The Jennifer Morgue next to shake off that feeling. I stopped reading The Clan Corporate 22 pages into that novel because I just could not take Miriam’s voice any longer. Aside from that small (and probably isolated to my own views) issue, I think Glasshouse comes across as a superb science fiction novel, and contains hugely interesting political speculations and implications, and very much driven by libertarian (or classical liberal) ideas.

1 Comment

  1. William H. Stoddard

    Glasshouse is my top choice, edging out Rainbows End, which is equally well written, but is less focused on issues of freedom or oppression. I don’t really think much of any of the other nominees.

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