Christopher
Ruocchio’s 2017 Empire of Silence is classic in every sense
of Golden Age science fiction. Aliens, the Campbellian hero’s
journey, galaxy spanning empires, court politics, sword duels, space
ships, etc.—they all drive the story. And yet there is a
sensitivity to culture, colonialism, and language that one rarely if
ever finds in such material. The child of George Lucas and
Ursula Le Guin, the novel makes for an interesting if not simplistic
milieu.
Star
Wars: A New Hope meets The Word for World is Forest,
Empire of Silence is the story of Hadrian Marlowe. A nobleman
exiled from home as a young man, Marlowe is forced to confront the
exigencies of the wider universe with very, very little in his
pockets. Relying on his wits and talents, Marlowe parlays his
command of languages, sense of honor, and sword skills into new and
exciting positions on a planet torn between fending off attacks by
the alien Cielcin from the outside while inside battling the
aggressive nature of the empire’s stifling religious order, the
Chattny. Battles fought with the tongue as much as sword, Marlowe’s
journey through the layers of this far-future Greek-ish empire is
certainly one to tell his children.
Empire
of Silence possesses scenes and elements straight from the pulp
tradition. Tentacled aliens attack heroic men as they defend women.
Emperors give edicts and gladiators duel. Space flight exists as do
laser spears. The rote and ritual of court and kingship pervades a
people spread across a multitude of exotic planets. But at the same
time, there is a steady, persistent focus on Hadrian’s relationship
to alien encounters as well as encounters with people whose
socio-political outlook, as jaded and discriminating as it is, are
likewise alien to him. Hadrian a polyglot, Ruocchcio uses language
as an intermediary for transcending this Otherness in ways that
subvert the standard ‘alien=evil’ pulp tradition. That the
religious order likewise seeks genocide—to slowly wipe all
non-human, sentient life from the universe—confirms the novel’s
position (at least as of this, the first volume in the Sun Eater
series) to be an interesting fence rider between conservative and
progressive sf.
In the end, this combination makes Empire of Silence a tantalizing yet long read. Readers looking for action-based space opera will likely be put off by Ruocchio’s focus on character and culture, but will be turned on by his portrayal of a galactic spanning empire, aliens, gladiator fights, family drama, and the tension surrounding Hadrian’s attempts to remain anonymous yet be successful in the universe. It is a hero narrative (extremely Campbellian, in fact), but non-standard in the sense Hadrian’s impetus to action is not automatically might-makes-right or super-heroic. Using his intelligence more than his brawn, he is an atypical centerpiece to what is more than the average space opera novel.
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