SF Reviews by Aaron M. Renn By Author - By Title - By Date Reviewed

The Cassini Division by Ken MacLeod (buy)

Conclusion: Believe the Hype - Highly Recommended

When this book came in the mail, I was pretty upset. I couldn't believe I just paid $23 for a book that was only 240 pages long. After reading it though, I realized just how fully I'd been sucked in to the modern SF's notion that only 500+ page epics can qualify as great novels. In the old days, lots of great books were under 300 pages. MacLeod proves that even today you don't have to write long to write well. I for one think a heckuva lot of current SF authors could learn something from him on this front.

A few hundred years in the future, earth is an anarchist paradise. The radical anarcho-capitalist elements were trapped on the far side of a wormhole. A couple of post-humans called the "fast folk" who had transcended after uploading their brains into computer hardware lived meaningless lives trapped inside their own virtual reality simulations on Jupiter. Nevertheless, they still manage to bombard human space with viruses that render all electronic equipment too dangerous to use. (Read the book to find out what was used instead). The Cassini Division stands guard around Jupiter waiting for any sign of a fast folk breakout.

All of that is set up in two previous novels that are not published in the US, but MacLeod backfills the story well. In this installment, the fast folk are indeed showing signs of life on Jupiter, and the Cassini Division has very little time to decide on a course of action.

MacLeod is apparently a political philosophy buff and it shows in this book. Since I am as well, that aspect really appealed to me. It's great to see speculations about what the world might be like if the followers of any of various fringe political movements ever got in charge. MacLeod is apparently an old communist, and his leftist sympathies show, but not enough to offend this liberal. I greatly enjoyed his world.

There are a lot great ideas and themes in here that I really don't have time to go into. With only 240 pages to work with, MacLeod didn't have much either. That's probably a good thing as the novel's length kept him from letting the story get bogged down in philosophical ramblings.

In short, just buy it. This is one of the rare books that's actually worth picking up in hardcover. I might even be paying a visit to amazon.co.uk to pick up his other three books in the near future.

%A MacLeod, Ken
%T The Cassini Division
%I Tor
%D 1999-07
%G ISBN 0-312-87044-2
%P 240 pp.
%0 hardcover, US$22.95

Reviewed on 1999-08-17


Copyright © 1999 Aaron M. Renn (arenn@urbanophile.com) All Rights Reserved
Back to my science fiction page or up to my homepage.

Just Say No to Frames, Ads, and Animated GIF's