In the year 2180, Lieutenant Selene Genji of the Unified Fleet sees Earth destroyed, despite the Unified Fleet’s attempt to stop it. The resultant shockwaves generated by the superweapon used causes Genji to be sent back to 2140, and is found by Kayl Owen, one of the Earth Guard (the predecessor to the Unified Fleet.) You see, 2140 hasn’t even had the arrival of the aliens-who-will-become-allies, the Tramontine, yet – it’s due to happen in a few weeks’ time – and therefore Genji - a human with some alien DNA - has not been born yet.
With her knowledge of what has happened to her, can Genji change future events? It’s not easy, as both Kayl and Genji have to go on the run. Someone doesn’t want them to succeed, and in fact is determined to kill both of them before others find out what will/could happen.
Can Genji change the future, and stop the destruction of Earth, even if by doing so she may be erased herself?
Sometimes it's nice to have an experienced author start a new series. After all, it’s a jumping-on point for readers often wanting to try an author’s books, but not knowing where to start, or feeling intimidated that they may have to read 12 books before the latest one. Hopefully the new book also shows the author's skills to their advantage.
This is the case with In Our Stars by Jack Campbell. And as you might expect from a New York Times -bestselling author of over 40 novels and counting, it's good, solid science fiction, with a good plot, fast pace, engaging characters and social commentary.
It’s a bit of a cliché but for those readers who like Heinlein, or more recently Peter F Hamilton, Elizabeth Moon or C. J. Cherryh, like them Jack manages to take classic ideas and mix them up for a great story. The book looks at issues in today’s society (although I could argue that they have been recurrent themes for decades). The issue of segregation, of being different and being outsiders, not to mention the xenophobia of being foreign/alien and the consequences of such bigoted and biased viewpoints are highlighted throughout the plot. There’s the idea of what makes a human or an alien.
The good news is that this one sucks you in from the start – in my case, so fast I read the first 100 pages without realising I was going to! Generally, the good guys are good and the bad guys are telegraphed a mile away, but the prose is clear, the dialogue straight out of a mil-sf David Weber or a Lois McMaster Bujold-type novel, and the setting exciting.
Interestingly, despite being set on Earth, Mars and the Moon, this future is not bright and sparkly. Instead we see societies in decline, tired systems struggling to cope, an illicit underworld on different planets where necessity causes a demand. This is not the bright future of Star Trek’s Federation, but more like a Star Wars universe of things broken, of making do and recycling, whilst a wealthy elite play the system and blithely ignore the rules – the opposite of, say, a Heinlein novel.
You could argue that some of the plot points are a little convenient, but the narrative was so winnable that I was able to forgive them. The only major downside for me was that there is no ending here - the book abruptly just stops, no doubt to be continued in Book 2.
Nevertheless, what I read I devoured in a couple of days. Sometimes it’s nice to read a book that just focusses on telling a good tale. This is one of them, told by someone who knows how to write an engaging story. I look forward to reading the next book set in Campbell’s future.