With a name like that, is anyone surprised to learn it is about the sun?
Roger Zelzany is one of my favourite authors and some of my most beloved books are by him. Thomas I had not heard of, but I bought this book of the strength of Zelazny.
Flare is hard science fiction - surprisingly, as Zelazney is better known for speculative fiction - and it starts with the hardest, hitting the reader at once with astrophysics and solar physics, describing the molecular composition of the sun. At the centre of this description is a race of beings, plasmotes which live in certain parts of the sun's – Surface? Corona? Plasma?
Now the book consists of six parts, in small instalments, each distinct so that the experience is almost like reading a whole heap of completely disconnected stories. It is VERY information dense in the best possible way and these snippets are clearly building toward SOMETHING but you just have to read along to find what.
The first story is one million BCE and for quite a while they were on a linear timeline, though that changed eventually.
The reoccurring theme, is of course, the sun and in 2081 Dr Freede is aa astrophysicist who earns the disparagement of his colleges by studying solar science. He has built a solar research vessel called Hyperion and is circling the sun to learn more about solar conditions. In 2081 mankind are spreading through the solar system, solar research has become a sideline of science, with no one interested after solar flares stopped occurring. Consequently most of the communications networks and a lot of the solar expansion lack proper radiation shielding - which we know will not end well.
Well, a solar storm occurs and we learn the repercussions from many points of view;
Gina who works at the Luna luxury resort gets hit while taking a group of tourists on a moonwalk.
We see what happens to a fully virtual reality stock exchange when all the electronics are fried (with people jacked in at the time getting fried too). A gamer, inside a virtual reality game does not fair better.
We get into the cockpit of the aeroplane of the future, the semiballistic SCramjet, where pilots sit in a fully virtual pod to guide the craft, based on it's electronic feedback – and suddenly there is no electronic feedback! This segment was genius.
It seems to me that the authors were fascinatedly exploring all the major ways in which different structures, engineering feats, communications signals and installations could be affected by such an event. and it is a lot of fun and a lot of science.
This book is a lot – I loved the reading experience but I had to concentrate on the science, usually, so it was a book that required my full attention and concentration, nor was it a fast read because it had so many small segments and so many point of view changes. There is a linear theme throughout the book, but not really following a main character nor a more traditional novel theme. It is more of a whole heap of small stories, from a whole heap of different people all over the world and solar system, all of which experiences meld together to make the story.
The ending of which is a gentle nod to evolving intelligence – and not from the Earth perspective but from the solar one.
It is an unusual science fiction by any standard, I enjoyed it a lot.