I can never remember what books I've talked about here. Oh well.
-
Picked up The Long Earth, the collaborative novel from SF mastermind Stephen Baxter and everybody's favorite fantasy author, Terry Pratchett. I wasn't really sure what to expect, but in retrospect it's all there in the author pairing: it's a fantasy novel that weaves in the harder sci fi elements.
Unlike Good Omens, this collaboration is notable for the backseat Terry Pratchett takes in its construction. This is very much a Baxter world, and a Baxter story. One of the main 'characters' is decidedly Pratchett, don't get me wrong, but the overarching story -- of a sudden shift in technology which allows humans to 'step' into adjacent alternate versions of Earth, and the practical consequences thereof -- is definitely Baxter.
I enjoyed it. The quirks of British humor add some levity to a very critical exploration of humankind's reaction to sudden infinity. The main characters are primarily optimists, or realists who enjoy solitude, but the characters against which they have to act -- the human ones, anyway -- are undeniably flawed in the kind of way that we like to pretend doesn't really exist. Take, for example, the political movement that comes out of this to protect the people who innately cannot 'step'; I won't spoil their reaction, but I think you won't be surprised to find it's a very angry, very small-minded and very militant movement.
I liked it enough that I decided to pick up The Long War, its direct sequel, released earlier this year. A follow-up to the events from The Long Earth, but this time trying a little harder to keep the thread of 'Datum Earth' (which is what they call the Earth you and I live on, still the reference against which all other Earths are measured) the central point. I think you can guess from the title what its primary concern is.
If you like harder SF, but still enjoy reading things that don't need to be explained in equations, I think you'd enjoy this one. Just don't go into it expecting Discworld.