“Too many people get too passionate about too little, and not excited about what matters.”
First contact, sort of. Good, hard science fiction. The type that encourages the reader to reflect on the science, rather than the fiction. Published in 2015. Cynical in the way Golden Age SF was hopeful. Don’t reflect too long, however because there are many technical groaners. (see quibbles) Wanted to give it five because it’s so good, but between Modesitt’s pontificating and the orbital dynamics couldn’t.
“Human beings talk about sharing knowledge while doing their best to hide it or get it first.”
Both protagonists are well-drawn, engaging people, who have different backgrounds and interests, but who from a chance meeting collaborate to both make a scientific breakthrough and save mankind as well as themselves. Modesitt quotes fictional books as hand puppets for his cynicism. A true-believer (of whatever) antagonist would add verisimilitude.
“Truth is a judgment placed on the facts, not the facts themselves. True scientists try to avoid using the word ‘truth.’”
Quibbles: Way too easy. Decides to intercept an object streaking toward the sun, strap two shuttles orbiting the moon together, and does so. Wait! What about the orbital inclination? Transferring from the orbital plane of the earth, to the solar, to the inclination of the object? The power, consumables, hard points, etc.? All waved away. “An outside shell of three or four meters, if reinforced correctly, it would probably be impervious to any weapon in any human arsenal.” Not now, let alone a century from now. There’s speed, there’s acceleration, and there’s increasing acceleration (jerk, believe it or not). Real scientists would tip to the latter earlier. His model of AI is more media than reality derived. A competently designed ISV would be serviceable without bringing it inside the shuttle. (For that matter, the air lock would be pumped to a vacuum, not release it’s precious air into space.)
“The universe could care less, and one way or another, the future … will forget.”