A.G. Riddle’s “Antarctica Station” is an apocalyptic, sci/fi adventure tale. I found it to be a three-star read, meaning I liked some aspects but had problems with others.
Dr. Laura Reynolds is an anesthesiologist working in a North Carolina hospital. She loves her work, which is fortunate because it’s pretty much all she has left. Her mother is dead. Her father is dying. Her fiancée is history because he cheated on her. Then her best friend and fellow doctor sets her up to take the fall for drug and patient-abuse crimes that he committed. According to her lawyer, it’s certain she’ll have to trade her white coat for an orange jumpsuit.
But then corporation Epoch Sciences comes to the rescue, arranging a plea deal whereby she’ll avoid jail time if she agrees to live and work for three years at an Antarctic research facility on a project studying human stasis (i.e., putting people to sleep for long periods). She’ll earn a million dollars per year but be completely cut off from the rest of the world—no trips home, phones, internet, etc. Dedicated to developing “the next world,” Epoch is guarded and secretive, and just a little bit sinister. Seeing no other option, Laura accepts. Only to be accosted by federal agents who tell her she must deliver to them Epoch’s secrets or her plea deal will be canceled and she’ll be sent to prison.
Arriving at Epoch’s ultra-modern, ultra-swank research facility, Laura sets about finding a way to steal Epoch’s secrets, escape undetected, and deliver herself and the materials to a far-off American station before permanent night sets in for the next six months. And she has only several weeks to do it, during which time she'll be closely watched and severely restricted to certain sections of the complex.
The first half of the novel was, for me, problematic. I had trouble believing it. For example, Laura is supposed to be a strong, determined woman. Yet when her lawyer, at only their first meeting, opines that the D.A.’s case is “open and shut” and that she can forget going to trial, she accepts it without argument or even looking for a second opinion. Indeed, the entire process by which author A. G. Riddle gets Laura from practicing at a North Carolina hospital to researching in Antarctica seemed contrived and lacking depth.
Once Laura gets to Antarctica, however, the novel becomes more enjoyable. Mr. Riddle does a commendable job “building” Epoch’s research facility, treating us to a complex reminiscent of the underground laboratory in Michael Crichton’s “The Andromeda Strain” and/or any of “Star Trek’s” Federation flagships. There’s a suspense-filled chase across the frozen wastes of Antarctica, featuring a very likable, very hi-tech Sno-Cat-type vehicle controlled by AI. Indeed, Mr. Riddle shows us a variety of technological developments that may be coming our way. And there are some pretty good plot twists.
All in all, a mixed bag. Not the best post-apocalyptic story I've ever read. But certainly not the worst.