Unfortunately despite being published in 1985, this book reads like something published twenty years earlier. It's hackneyed, it's tired, and despite an interesting premise the result isn't worth it.
So the plot is basically that the Mafia has decided to set up a corporation to build a space colony, milk that for everything it's worth, run it into the ground, and then turn it into an extralegal zone where anything goes. Honestly, if the villains had just been corporate flacks who were doing usual corporate shenanigans I would have thought this was more interesting.
Like, you have to understand this book is -filled- with cliches and other nonsense. The high-ranking woman who's practically in charge of the project and has a doctorate in physics? Well she's just a crazy women's libber. Incidentally her job is secretary and most of the time she hands out drinks to the men. There's a scene of violence against women I found distasteful. And that barely scratches the surface.
And worst of all there's a final scene where the chief bad guy does the whole "Well, I'm going to kill all of you anyway so I may as well reveal my evil scheme in all its entirety." Like, even for the 80s monologuing was pretty cliche, right? Maybe that's a more recent thing.
Ultimately most of this book wasn't very good and the best quote was of course from somebody else:
The space colony project is offered as the solution to virtually all the problems rising from the limitations of our earthly environment. That it will solve all of these problems is a possibility that one may legitimately doubt. What cannot be doubted is that the project is an ideal solution to the moral dilemma of all those in this society who cannot face the necessities of meaningful change. It is superbly attuned to the wishes of the corporation executives, bureaucrats, militarists, political operators, and scientific experts who are the chief beneficiaries of the forces that have produced our crisis...It avoids the corporate and governmental big-dealing that will be bound to accompany the expenditure of a hundred million dollars.
Wendell Berry