Ratings1
Average rating5
Medusa in the Graveyard is the action-packed, science fiction sequel to Emily Devenport's Medusa Uploaded. The Verge—15 new science fiction and fantasy books to check out in July Oichi Angelis, former Worm, along with her fellow insurgents on the generation starship Olympia, head deeper into the Charon System for the planet called Graveyard. Ancient, sentient, alien starships wait for them—three colossi so powerful they remain aware even in self-imposed sleep. The race that made the Three are dead, but Oichi's people were engineered with this ancient DNA. A delegation from Olympia must journey to the heart of Graveyard and be judged by the Three. Before they're done, they will discover that weapons are the least of what the ships have to offer. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Series
2 primary booksThe Medusa Cycle is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2018 with contributions by Emily Devenport.
Reviews with the most likes.
Pros: interesting new characters and settings, Oichi develops more as a person
Cons: lots of new players and it can be hard to keep them all straight
Oichi's world has changed with the overthrow of the Executive class and the mass joining of medusa units. It's time for the inhabitants of Olympia to engage with the outside world, starting with a messenger from the weapon's clan ship that's following them, and ending with meeting the three on the planet Graveyard. But how does someone who's used to executing opponents learn to negotiate? And why doesn't Medusa agree with her chosen path?
If it's been a while since you read Medusa Uploaded, there's so much going on that it's worth giving that a reread before starting this one. Medusa in the Graveyard picks up roughly one year after the first novel ends, and there's little recap.
Unfortunately I had a number of tasks I had to accomplish while reading this so it was a disjointed experience of a few pages here, a chapter or two there. This book requires some measure of concentration as there are a lot of new players that come in briefly and then don't show up again until later. And it's easy to forget who is who.
Having said that, I loved seeing the new groups the Olympians would have to trade/negotiate with and just how big their universe is. There are belters, aliens, a variety of ships on Graveyard created by vastly different intelligences. The actual trek to see the ships was quite interesting and a little trippy.
I liked that Oichi had to go through a lot of personal development. It makes sense that she's not the best suited for negotiating given her past, and I thought the trials she went through as a result were realistic.
I'm not sure if there's more to this series, but the book had a satisfying ending that wrapped up a lot.