Starrigger is the first book in John DeChancie's Skyway Trilogy, and was a nominee in 1984 for the Locus Award for Best First Novel. It's set in the future, 2106 to be exact, and in this book mankind has access to something called the Skyway, which is basically an extensive roadway system built in space by an alien civilization that is thought to be long-extinct. There are portals along the road that will fast-track you to other planets, but as the system was built by an extinct civilization no one really knows how it works; there are things called "potluck portals" that have never been explored and may be one-way trips for those daring to enter them, there are "Skyway Patrol" cars, automated vehicles built by the alien civilization, that will vaporize you if you block traffic on the road and generally keep order on the Skyway, and so on.
However, despite the unknowns, the Skyway obviously has tremendous benefits, opening up easy and quick access to many previously unreachable worlds, creating entirely new industries and interplanetary trade, and so on, and so of course mankind has mass-adopted its usage. There are two main trucking/transport companies in this future, the Starriggers Guild, headed by the protagonist Jake McGraw, and its rival TATOO, led by Jake's nemesis Corey Wilkes. Skyway legend has it that an artifact exists called a "Roadmap", which outlines all the portals and pathways of the still largely unexplored Skyway. Whoever possesses such a map would be at a great strategic advantage, knowing where every potluck portal goes and ultimately where the Skyway extends to. Rumour on the "skyband" is that Jake has somehow come into possession of a Roadmap, and some people will kill to get it from him...
That's the general setup and plot of the book. Sadly, I didn't enjoy Starrigger for the most part. The writing was pedestrian at times, and at others was outright bad. The book has an excellent premise, and in the hands of the right author I think such a fantastic idea, with such a broad, universe-spanning scope as Starrigger could have become a space opera to rival Star Wars. But it's apparent early on and throughout the book that John DeChancie isn't the right author; descriptions of settings, vehicles, characters, and pretty much everything are very superficial, and there's virtually no world-building to be found in these pages.
You can't just ride a brilliant premise and setup to success; the execution matters. If you execute in a superficial, two-dimensional way, you can't expect readers to have a great reading experience. That's just not how it works. Great works of science fiction combine a brilliant premise with vibrant, three-dimensional characters the reader can get invested in, and Starrigger never achieved that for me. I didn't care about any of these characters, and due to lack of description I didn't even know what the truck/rig, which was a main character throughout the book, even remotely looked like, so in my mind I ended up imagining it looking like the truck from the cover art! That is just sad.
There are also long stretches of this book where absolutely nothing happens, and I've never read a book in my life that had a huge chase scene that actually bored me, but now I have. To add to that, when the book wasn't boring me, it was confusing me; DeChancie puts forward the concept that you can go into some portals and end up back where you started, and now there's somehow two of you and it's a Paradox, but he doesn't explain it very well, and then some of the characters are double agents in seeming schemes within schemes...trying to double-cross this guy or that organization, but they're also really working for the government and so they actually a good guy, but wait they're really more like a bad guy but they're kinda good, and sometimes you want to shoot them but then in the next scene they're your best friend...ugh. It was just tiring after a while. And it made no sense at all.
To be fair, I did enjoy parts of the book, and I think DeChancie's descriptions of a climate-change-ravaged 2106 will bear out to the point that this book will be considered eerily prescient in the far future. If I had to summarize Starrigger, I would do so as follows: Brilliant concept, poor execution. Before I read this book, I bought book two, Red Limit Freeway. The final two books in this series get higher ratings on Goodreads than book one, so I'll definitely check out the second book and see if there's an improvement, but I do so a bit grudgingly, and I will definitely avoid book three if things don't significantly improve in this series.