Keanu Reeves: a ‘genre-bending pioneer’ See Li/Picture Capital/Alamy
The world of science fiction sees some major celebrity input this month, as Keanu Reeves鈥檚 debut novel hits the shelves. We can also look forward to the latest book from one of the UK鈥檚 top sci-fi writers, Adam Roberts, and to some quantum fun from Peng Shepherd.
I think I鈥檓 most excited about Mateo Askaripour鈥檚 This Great Hemisphere, though. It鈥檚 a mix of sci-fi and political thriller, and comes highly recommended 鈥 just what I need for my holiday reading later in July. I might also pack MJ Wassmer鈥檚 Zero Stars, Do Not Recommend, which sees a bunch of holiday-makers going a bit Lord of the Flies when the sun explodes while they are at a luxury resort. Just the ticket to relax with.
This is a collaboration between 鈥渢wo genre-bending pioneers鈥, according to its publisher, inspired by Keanu Reeves鈥檚 BRZRKR comic books. It follows an immortal soldier who wants to be able to die, a 鈥渢all lean man 鈥 looking at them from below a long fringe of black hair鈥, who clearly is meant to look exactly like Reeves. A US black-ops group says it can help him with that death wish 鈥 if he helps the team out first.
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Now, I have read some of this already, because I am a big fan of China Mi茅ville (if you haven鈥檛 read Embassytown then rush to get a copy 鈥 it鈥檚 such a clever and mind-bending piece of sci-fi). And obviously, I鈥檓 a big fan of Reeves too, because鈥 Keanu Reeves.
But I had to put the book aside because I found it so flowery that I couldn鈥檛 keep going. I may well dip back in, though, because if you can鈥檛 have faith in Neo, who can you have faith in? Maybe I just need to get into the zone.
OK, this one I am definitely up for. Not only does it sound like tons of fun, but Roberts is reliably excellent. This time round, he gives us two starships orbiting a black hole. Both ships鈥 crews are killed in a single afternoon by Captain Alpha Raine, who says he was commanded to do so by a voice emanating from the black hole. This voice is named, rather enticingly, Mr Modo. Nobody believes Raine, of course, but something seems to be spreading from inside that black hole.
Set in the future, this novel follows a young woman relegated to second-class citizenship who sets out to find her older brother 鈥 someone she had thought was dead, but is now the main suspect in a high-profile murder. Its publisher is comparing it to the work of N. K. Jemisin and Naomi Alderman, and an early review from the book industry site Kirkus called it “a page-turning vision of a future made all too plausible by our volatile present”. I think it sounds really interesting and will definitely be tracking it down.
This looks super intriguing. It鈥檚 set in a near-future world where cancer is being eradicated by a new technological therapy, in which the body鈥檚 cells are entirely replaced with 鈥渘anites鈥, robot cells that cure the sick 鈥 and, in fact, leave the person almost immortal.
We follow literary researcher Yonghun, who has a lot going on: not only does he create a machine that can think, but he also receives the new nanotherapy. This book promises that it will explore 鈥渢he nature of intelligence and the unexpected consequences of progress, the meaning of personhood and life, and what we really have to fear from technology and the future鈥 鈥 a lot, for one novel, but I鈥檓 willing to give it a go.
The Edge of Solitude is set on a ship heading for Antarctica Shutterstock/Vadim_N
This eco-thriller is set during 鈥渁 time of acute climate crisis鈥, on a ship heading for Antarctica to hopefully save the region. On board is a disgraced environmental activist, Ivy Cunningham, who is trying to rescue her reputation 鈥 but is also starting to question the motives of her fellow passengers, and of the project as a whole.
Dan Foster, a 鈥減rofessional underachiever鈥, is taking a holiday on an island resort when the sun explodes. He then has to choose whether to save himself or help his fellow guests as the temperature drops and revolution brews. Apocalypse in paradise? I鈥檓 there!
At 45, Marsh isn鈥檛 pleased with where her life has ended up, from her career to her marriage to her relationship with her teenage daughter. So when she gets the chance to be the star of the TV game show All This and More, which uses 鈥渜uantum technology鈥 to let contestants revisit their pasts, she seizes it. But 鈥 you guessed it 鈥 even when she gets everything she wants, it all seems a little off, and Marsh starts to ask if it is worth it. Another one for my holiday reading, I think 鈥 I love a good 鈥渓ooking for happy ever after鈥 story, and the addition of time travel and a sprinkle of quantum fairy dust sounds great.
This new novella from the author of聽The Red Scholar鈥檚 Wake聽is a space opera with added martial arts. It is set in an area of space known as the Hollows, which is populated by the mysterious, deadly Tanglers. When a Tangler escapes, it must be captured before it can destroy a civilian city. Two juniors from rival clans, both on missions to stop the Tangler, find their feelings for each other growing.
This short story collection will give us a 鈥渒aleidoscopic view of the climate crisis鈥, promises its publisher, moving from a boy trying to bring the natural world back to his urban life to a ballet dancer trying to inhabit the consciousness of a rat (at this stage, it isn鈥檛 clear why – but I鈥檓 keen to find out).
Gravity Lost is the second in the space-set Ambit’s Run series Shutterstock/Corona Borealis Studio
This is the second in the Ambit鈥檚 Run series from Sagas, following Cascade Failure. It sees the crew of the Ambit, fresh from thwarting the destruction of a planet, trying to jailbreak the man they had just handed over to one of the major powers in the Spiral.
Agent Gregory Roarke has been tasked with finding a teleportation portal on a far-flung colony world. But the former bounty hunter finds himself up against some better-equipped rivals 鈥 and then the murders begin鈥 This is the latest in the series.
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