One of the
leading writers of space opera in modern science fiction, it can only be
imagined that when Jonathan Strahan approached Alastair Reynolds with the
anthology theme ‘godlike machines’ in 2010,
Reynolds jumped at the chance to contribute a story. Going on to headline the anthology, the
novella he produced, Troika, is a Big
Dumb Object story for a new generation.
Troika opens with Dimitri Ivanov stumbling through the
freezing cold having just escaped from a mental institution. Clutching a precious metal object in his
hand, hypothermia is setting in as he wanders the backroads of a Russian
winter. Picked up by a passing plow
driver, he is dropped at his destination point, shivering but revived, and
rings the doorbell of Nesha Petrova. An
ageing woman answers the door, and after initially doubting the man’s announced
identity, lets him in. Sitting over a
pot of tea, what unfolds is an intriguing tale of exploration and discovery of
a BDO the size of Tasmania that had appeared in the galaxy many years prior. Ivanov one of three cosmonauts sent by Second
Soviet to probe the massive shelled entity, the reader must wait until the last
pages to learn how the metal object plays into the story of Petrova.
As can be
imagined with the theme of ‘godlike machine’, the BDO Ivanov and his crew
members explore is full of twists and turns, puzzles and elements never quite
clicking into logical place at the outset.
Reynolds’ ultimate explanation for why it exists is a touch weak, but
this does not prevent his creative largesse from extruding itself onto the
page. Relevancy sacrificed for good old
fashioned Golden Age adventure and intrigue, the pages do indeed turn as one
shell after another are penetrated.
From what
few of Reynolds’ novels and short stories I’ve read, I’m not a fan of his
writing style. The ideas are all I could
want in space opera, but the lack of refined, practiced prose ultimately
damages my final opinion. The characters
become cardboard, plot movement is openly contrived, and any sense of plausibility
evaporates as a result. Troika, however, features Reynolds
noticeably throttling back on the info dumps and tightening what is usually clumsy
writing. The sentences are short, quick,
to the point, and give the reader a little room to imagine the small
details. And the novella wholly benefits
from this approach. Ivanov, his crew
members, and Ivanov all feel more like real people. He remains short of Bradbury or Ballard when
it comes characterization and dialogue, but the writing does not hinder, and at
times even enhances the reading experience.
In the
end, Troika is a revamping of the BDO
science fiction motif that Reynolds pulls off successfully. Balancing a split narrative (past and
present), as well has honing in his prose on the necessities, the author proves
his skills as a writer are improving over early efforts. From a thematic point of view, however, he
remains as pro-science as ever—a The City& the Stars concept underlying the denouement of Troika. Clarke and BDOs
going back decades, Troika is retro
sci-fi for the modern era. Oh, and, have
your Profokiev on hand reading the novella…
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