I expect to enjoy this, since I liked Cyteen (this is the sequel), but man, the political economy of the intro doesn't make any sense to me. "Frontier conditions" on space stations -- stations with no obvious economic import. 3/4 million people in Alliance! Millions in Union! Vs. billions on Earth! Though Union's *trends*, with azi birthlabs and an apparent monopoly on rejuv, make sense.
But if you've got half a million people around Pell, why are you settling tens of thousand in other solar systems? Aaaargh.
Giving your old enemy a trade monopoly in your own space? Especially when you were more or less winning? I hope I don't have to re-read Downbelow Station and Cyteen.
But if you've got half a million people around Pell, why are you settling tens of thousand in other solar systems? Aaaargh.
Giving your old enemy a trade monopoly in your own space? Especially when you were more or less winning? I hope I don't have to re-read Downbelow Station and Cyteen.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 00:27 (UTC)From:At worst, at least her fiction uses actual stars in their real locations.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 01:27 (UTC)From:Oh, that's simple, and has numerous precedents in real history. One would establish small settlements to claim priority on a world or system, both to benefit from future expansion of those settlements, and to forestall the expansion of rivals into those systems. Given the whole Alliance-Union hostility, strategic issues might also drive such colonization, and the economic benefits to be obtained by serving strategic consideration.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 03:26 (UTC)From:(not much spoilers here, it's the first 4 pages of the book.)