Edges
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- ¥1,200
発行者による作品情報
From the Edge of Apocalypse:
Deception Well is a world on the edge, home to an isolated remnant surviving at the farthest reach of human expansion. All across the frontier, other worlds have succumbed to the relentless attacks of robotic alien warships, while hundreds of light years away, the core of human civilization—those star systems closest to Earth, known as the Hallowed Vasties—have all fallen to ruins. Powerful telescopes can see only dust and debris where once there were orbital mega-structures so huge they eclipsed the light of their parent stars.
No one knows for sure what caused the Hallowed Vasties to fail, but a hardened adventurer named Urban intends to find out. He has the resources to do it. He commands a captive alien starship fully capable of facing the dangers that lie beyond Deception Well.
With a ship's company of explorers and scientists, Urban is embarking on a voyage of re-discovery. They will be the first in centuries to confront the hazards of an inverted frontier as they venture back along the path of human migration. Their goal: to unravel the mystery of the Hallowed Vasties and to discover what monstrous life might have grown up among the ruins.
Edges is a new entry point into the classic story world of Linda Nagata's The Nanotech Succession.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This ambling fourth in Nebula-winner Nagata's Nanotech Succession universe, appearing more than 20 years after the original trilogy's publication, pairs unique biotechnological starships with a humanistic philosophy, but fails to see the forest for the trees. The humans of the Deception Well solar system are sure they are the last outpost of the species, having managed to hide from the genocidal Chenzeme for centuries. Then Urban, a centuries-old survivor of the last expedition outward, returns aboard the captured Chenzeme courser Dragon. A crew of explorers uploads to the biomechanical warship and begins traversing a galaxy of dead worlds, heading toward Earth. But the voyage derails when Dragon is infected by a mysterious being, leading to a war for command. Nagata's clean style illuminates an abundance of technical details, but that meticulousness slows plot developments to a crawl as they fizzle into irrelevant explanation, crew theorizing, or arguments. This in-depth tour of a far-future cosmos will appeal to setting-oriented hard SF readers, but leave action-lovers unsatisfied.