"You see the blue first. Endless blue. Blue, to me, is the most terrifying colour. It is unnatural, alien, staring. Death is endless pale blue. Then you see the white on the blue--clouds: I learned that in colloq, though I still don't understand how they work. Next you see the green and brown beneath the blue--more brown than green, I'm told, and growing every year, every lune, every day. Last of all you see the lights along the night edge of the world, webs and knits and whirls of lights. I understand a terrible thing. My world, everything in it, all my friends and family, all my life, are just toys. Pretend. That is the real world: there."
Being the Richard Anderson fan that I am, I instantly recognized his work when the cover for The Menace from Farside was revealed. I love every single Flaptraps cover and this one is no exception. Designed by the talented Christine Foltzer, the art caught my eye immediately. I mean.. LOOK AT IT!! It's fucking glorious!
Unfortunately, the story itself is far less alluring than the radical cover.
This is a difficult one to review, because it just didn't make a lot of sense to me.
Described as a standalone, The Menace from Farside is set in the same world as Ian McDonald's Luna series, which I have not read.
This was intriguing at first with the Ring Marriages, a polyamorous marriage contract of sorts. Cariad Corcoran is a teenager who has grown up within a Ring Marriage. She was raised by her birth mother, Laine and Laine's two spouses - Dolores, her iz and Andros, her derecho. Each of those spouses then have two partners, link by link, so on and so forth around this ring. Okay, rad. I'm into this! After all, science fiction is no stranger to polyamory. Just look at much of Robert A. Heinlein's work! I believe this title is even a nod to his The Menace from Earth book, as well.
However, the story became convoluted. This novella was written as though Cariad is describing an adventure to find the moon's first footprint to a psychiatric bot. I never ended up warming to her, instead I found her incredibly annoying.
In my opinion, this needed more space (no pun intended) than the 152 pages it was given. Ultimately, the worldbuilding just didn't grab me as much as I would have hoped. It wasn't terribly memorable.
I can't say whether I would feel differently if I had read the main series or not, but my guess is I wouldn't.
(Thanks to Tor.com Publishing for sending me a copy!)
**The quotes above were taken from an ARC & are subject to change upon publication**