The World Before by Karen Travis is an Original Sci-fi novel, and the third book of Travis’s “Wess’har War” Book Trilogy. In the year 2376, and a UN military expedition is marooned on Wess'ej Galaxy, twenty-five light years from Earth. Following a tactical incident of astronomical ramifications, the military expedition has annihilated a sentient species on nearby planet of Bezer'ej. Commander Lindsay Neville, with Mohan Rayat as loyal supporter and accomplice, was responsible for detonating the nuclear bombs on Bezer'ej, and the fragile bezeri of that planet simply and nearly instantly ceased to exist. Neville's motives and methods - as she argued - were strategically proper and politically necessary. After all, she sought to do nothing more or less than destroy the mysterious c'naatat, a potentially valuable and possibly dangerous parasitic life-form that transforms and indefinitely extends the life of its host and makes the host indestructible. The scope and offensiveness of the collateral genocide, however, has outraged the wess'har, the indigenous inhabitants of Wess'ej. Slow to anger but resolute and merciless when sufficiently provoked, the matriarchal government of Wess'ej, having failed in its sworn obligation as protectors of Bezer'ej, now seems to be slowly but irrevocably moving towards retaliatory action against Earth.
Meanwhile, Ade Bennett, a member of the ill-fated expedition, now faces an uncertain future on Wess'ej, and his life is further complicated by the fact that he has been dismissed from the service, and - like the several hundred other unwelcome visitors from Earth, including Neville and Rayat, who have received an uneasy sanctuary on nearby Umeh among the isenj - Bennett worries that he has been apparently abandoned to his fate by the Federal European Union back home on Earth. Bennett's despair is deepened by his grief over the apparent death of Shan Frankland. After Frankland went to her near-certain death in the vacuum of space after the Bezer-ej disaster, Bennett feels utterly alone and seems to have lost all reason for living.
Tensions build between Wess-ej and Umeh, but a more powerful force from the ancestral home planet, the World Before, will soon impose its judgment upon the individual humans responsible for the slaughter. Of course, Earth itself must answer for its complicity, but significantly and most surprisingly, everyone's fates - Wess'ej's, Umeh's and Earth's - may ultimately depend on the dead woman: Shan Frankland who has become more alien then human.
How to live with the consequences of your choices. This is the dilemma Traviss' characters circle in this installment of Wess'har series. Journalist Eddie Michallat worries that by helping the Wess'har he has lost his objectivity. The Wess'ej on F'nar fear their way of life will be ruined by the arrival of their brethren from Eqbas Vhor, the titular World Before, from whom they have been separated for over ten millennia. The Isenj prime minister commits an act of political betrayal in hopes of convincing his countrymen to seek the help of the Wess'ej in rebalancing the ecology of their overpopulated world. Shan Frankland weighs the risk of an imminent restructuring of Earth's ecosystem by the Wess'ej from Eqbas Vhor. This is not the future of Star Trek's Federation, where humans act benevolently in their exploration of the cosmos. In Traviss' universe, humans are as we know them today - greedy, grasping, intolerant, and ready to kill for advantage. No longer the preeminent power in the universe, humans must now learn to accept limits to their expansion imposed from afar by a more powerful species. Besides a refreshingly candid portrait of homo sapiens, what distinguishes this series of novels is Traviss' development of character. The players grow and learn as a result of their experience and Traviss is not afraid to explore faults in her heroes, or redeeming qualities in her villains. Naval commander Lindsay, for example, once in charge of the Thetis mission and now responsible for setting off a nuclear device that results in the near extinction of the aquatic Bezer'ej, learns to deny her selfish desires for revenge and for her own death by choosing to spend the rest of her life helping the Bezer'ej to rebuild their society.
Overall, Karen Traviss's exciting Sci-fi novel The World Before is a fascinating tale of a fateful encounter between alien worlds. Drawing upon traditional SF thematic concerns the speculative future of politics, populations, and environments beyond Earth's boundaries Traviss uses The World Before to more closely look at the possibilities and implications of intercultural (interplanetary) anxieties and the endangerment (exploitation) of species. Filled with vivid characterizations and enriched by a complex plot, The World Before is a daring critique of what might actually happen when humanity dares to expand beyond our currently limited boundaries.