One chapter into Planetfall, two things were abundantly clear: this book was going to be very different from the Split Worlds books and Emma Newman had leveled up as a writer. The first proved to be true, and although I found the Split Worlds books more enjoyable and satisfying, I admire Newman for stretching herself here.
Planetfall looks into a future where 3-D printing can be used for just about anything (even food, though some people prefer cooking the old-fashioned way) and social media/online communication has been integrated into our very brains. That worldbuilding alone drew me in, but also we're on another planet, in a colony, and there's a strange visitor to this colony even though no one else is supposed to be here.
Renata Ghali, our narrator, reacts particularly strongly to this visitor because he reminds her of her friend and lover Lee Suh-Mi, the Pathfinder, the woman who brought them to this planet two decades ago (unlike most science fiction novel protagonists, Renata is in her late seventies, though I usually forgot this, as she is fairly spry and active and doesn't act much older than middle-aged). This man may find out...her dark secret. Something happened at first Planetfall, and the book spirals around this secret for hundreds of pages before finally revealing the truth, doling out pieces here and there so that you can mostly put it together as you go along. I found this narrative technique a bit frustrating and disorienting, as it was sometimes hard to tell when we were slipping in and out of flashbacks, but I can't deny that it kept me reading because I was curious to know the full story. Even though the umpteenth repetition of Renata and Mack's "We have to tell them!!"/"They're not ready to know THE TRUTH!!!" conversation wore on me after a while, like I don't give a shit if you tell them, just tell ME, Christ. (Then tell them. Because that's good plot fodder, obvs.)
This book isn't actually plot-focused, though. It's far more about character and ideas. I found Ren fascinating, even though I didn't always like her. The first-person present narration puts us right in her head, and the interplay between her current situation and her memories helps create a picture of who she is and why she is. Her relationships with other characters define her as well: her friend and co-conspirator Mack, her doctor and ex Kay, the mysterious visitor Sung-Soo. A subplot about her dangerous hoarding habit is especially interesting because we see it from her perspective, and she doesn't see the problem, even though we can. Ren as a character is a piece of work, and she, like the worldbuilding, is one of the strengths of the book.
The ideas engaged me less so, partly because they were so tied up in the ~*mystery*~ of the ~*dark secret*~. We learn early on that the colony is next to something called "God's city," and they came to this planet to find God or whatever. And the book plays with the idea of faith in relation to the Big Lie that Renata and Mack are keeping from the colony. But looking for God in space and searching for the origins of humanity are well-trodden topics in science fiction, and I didn't think the answers Newman provided were very fresh or satisfying. I loved the general idea of the Pathfinder and how Lee Suh-Mi was brought to God's city, but if you're looking for concrete answers about what happened, you won't find them here. For some, that metaphysical ambiguity will be a feature; for me, it was a bug. Especially in the last few pages: everything ramps up considerably in the last several chapters and I was hoping for a build-up to some amazing cosmic payoff and...not really.
In the end I'm left with mixed but mostly positive feelings about Planetfall because I dig its ambition and overall vibe. It asks Big Questions and hints at Answers, but at its heart it's about one woman's journey: into space and into herself.