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Our verdict on Lake of Darkness by Adam Roberts: A mixed bag

The New 女生小视频 Book Club has just finished reading Adam Roberts's novel Lake of Darkness. Some of us loved it 鈥 but some of us weren't so sure about this far-future set slice of hard science fiction

By Alison Flood

1 August 2025

The New 女生小视频 Book Club has just read Adam Roberts's Lake of Darkness

The New 女生小视频 Book Club has just read Adam Roberts’s Lake of Darkness

Lawrie photography

After watching historical figures travel through time in Kaliane Bradley鈥檚 The Ministry of Time, the New 女生小视频 Book Club headed in the other direction for our latest read, to the far future and some hard science fiction with Adam Roberts鈥檚 Lake of Darkness. Taking place in an apparently utopian society, this opens as two spaceships orbit a black hole 鈥 only for the captain of one of them to claim he鈥檚 been commanded to murder all his shipmates by a voice emanating from the black hole. Not so utopian after all, and via Roberts鈥 protagonist Saccade, a historian of serial killers from the 21st century, we soon learn more about this mysterious presence.

This one was a mixed bag for our readers, with some of you really enjoying it and others finding it slow-going. I鈥檓 on the side of New 女生小视频 Book Club member Paul Jonas, who writes on our group that he was 鈥渃aptivated by the story鈥 and 鈥渓oved the hard sci-fi elements of space travel, black holes and utopian societies鈥. Paul鈥檚 smarter than me 鈥 he 鈥渁lso loved the underlying philosophical elements of Deleuze鈥檚 thought鈥 in this novel, which I鈥檓 not sure I got.

I am a grumpy sort when it comes to fiction and I rarely find myself genuinely amused by books that claim to be funny (Terry Pratchett aside, of course). This wasn鈥檛 the case with Lake of Darkness: I was chuckling to myself on all sorts of occasions, and I particularly enjoyed how Roberts鈥檚 far-future characters mangled our history, from their deciphering of so-called 鈥more鈥檚 code, an Early Modern tik-tak system of long and short pulses, each standing for one glyph鈥 to their singing of that well-known Beatles song, We All Live in a Yellow Sunny Scene.

Like Paul, I was also very intrigued by the book鈥檚 portrayal of a utopian future society and the issues it raised. When I chatted to him, Roberts told me he wants to write a novel in all of science fiction鈥檚 various subgenres. This was his take on utopia, but even if you take the novel鈥檚 antagonist, the Gentleman (or to use his more common name 鈥 spoiler alert 鈥 Satan), out of it, this utopian vision isn鈥檛 very tempting. There鈥檚 nothing for anyone to do, as all work has been taken over by 鈥渃lever machines鈥. Time is filled with hobbies or fandoms; as the Gentleman puts it: 鈥淵ou people know the value of everything and the cost of nothing. But unless something costs, it鈥檚 worthless. The best things cost a lot.鈥 I found it rather enjoyable to feel a little superior to this future society by virtue of having a job (and being able to read).

Book club member Charlotte Cee was another fan, listening to the audiobook and 鈥渧ery much enjoying the humour and the hard science鈥. 鈥淎s for life inside a black hole 鈥 it’s an interesting one,鈥 she adds. 鈥淎s one of the characters says, there is certainly energy available, but is there space or time?!鈥

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Barbara Howe wasn鈥檛 so sure. Although she enjoyed the 鈥渉istorical misunderstandings鈥 and the 鈥渦topian critique鈥 in the book, she felt that 鈥渢he utopia painted also seems like a very male vision of one, what with all the nudity and inconsequential sex and not one word about the drudgery of child care or even acknowledging the existence of children who have to be trained to fit into the utopian ideals鈥.

Barbara also brought up a point that bothered a few other readers: she was glad she read Lake of Darkness as an ebook, because she 鈥渉ad to look up more words in this one book than in the last dozen I’ve read put together鈥. Alan Perrett felt similarly, finding the wide vocabulary and having to look up various terms 鈥渁 bit off-putting鈥. Jess Brady was in this team too, loving 鈥渢he concept鈥 but criticising the 鈥渟low prose鈥.

This wasn鈥檛 something I noticed particularly 鈥 not because I knew all the words Roberts used, but because (like the hard physics in the book), I tend to let that sort of thing wash over me. As Barbara put it, in reference to the physics of it all: 鈥淚 treat any description of FTL 聽(faster than light) flight with the same respect I treat descriptions of time travel: with the assumption that they are there to provide a veneer of scientific respectability on a plot device that’s basically magic. Meaning I usually skim聽them to see if they’re entertaining 鈥 these were that 鈥 without putting in any effort to see if the physics makes sense.鈥

Another criticism from readers was that the characters were unlikeable: Alan wrote that 鈥渢here wasn’t a single person that I sympathised with or mourned their death. They are all incredibly annoying and foolish.鈥 Karen Seers agreed: 鈥淭here was enough in the book to grab my interest in the beginning, but I just didn鈥檛 develop an interest in a cast of unlikeable characters. I couldn鈥檛 care what happened to them at the end.鈥

Well, that鈥檚 something I agree with. The characters are all incredibly silly and some of them 鈥 Guunarsonsdottir, I鈥檓 looking at you 鈥 are just awful. But I felt that was the point, and I enjoyed watching their travails as these cossetted and intellectually lazy people tried to deal with real danger 鈥 generally by forming another committee to discuss what to do. And I can鈥檛 quibble with the genius of naming a character Bartlewasp. That鈥檚 just funny in itself.

Paul felt similarly to me, I think. 鈥淪accade was a great character, ok she is living in a utopia surrounded by AI, so she is going to be a bit coddled. They sort of remind me of characters in Iain M Banks鈥檚 Culture stories, except they are not special agents for Special Circumstance so are not so savvy,鈥 he writes. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 find I have to totally identify with characters in a story. I can follow them, without them being total saints or superheroes.鈥

I finished Lake of Darkness with lots of Capital T Thoughts, many of which I鈥檓 still pondering. Did the black hole stuff actually make sense? Did I really understand what happened at the end? I鈥檓 still not sure, but I鈥檓 enjoying mulling it all over 鈥 as is Barbara, who concludes that the novel 鈥渨ent in directions I was not expecting, and was certainly thought provoking鈥.

鈥淭oward the end, I felt like I was back in the 1980s, trying to make sense of the paradoxes in ,鈥 she adds. 鈥淭hankfully, that didn’t last too long, but I’m still baffled by the ending. I don’t understand why Joyns did what she did. And did the Gentleman get what he wanted, or not?鈥

Paul is also still puzzling it all out alongside Barbara and I: 鈥淭he end was perhaps confusing because of the black hole physics,鈥 he writes. 鈥淎lso the geometry stuff about inside/outside an infinite object was pretty mind bending.鈥

Let鈥檚 move on, though, from black hole physics to gravity for our next read, which is the wonderful by Alex Foster. This brilliant debut novel imagines that the spin of Earth is gradually accelerating, with increasingly devastating effects as days shorten, eventually to just 2 hours. I absolutely loved it and can鈥檛 wait to find out what you all think. You can check out an extract from the novel here 鈥 it shows you how this speeding Earth is, inevitably, the fault of us humans 鈥 and read a piece by Alex here, in which he talks about how the physics of an accelerating Earth would play out. I鈥檒l be talking to him later this month about the novel, so do pop any questions you have for him on our group.

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