Weaponized
2022 • 473 pages

Ratings4

Average rating3

15

This was an amazing and imaginative story set in a far-flung future. In this future world of the Polity, AI has come to govern human civilization that has spread out across the galaxy using both physical spaceships and matter transmitter gates called runcibles. It is not an overtly despotic rule, since humans can now live for centuries in relative comfort exploring personal interests within certain AI guidelines. It is also a future of very advanced nanotechnology in which each person can change and augment their physical forms in specialized ways. However, some balk at AI control and augmentation and long to be free to explore what it means to be a truly free human being. Some turn to violence against AI control that the AI easily quashes, while others look to less violent means to become more independent with AI's permission. As an aside, over the centuries of exploration ancient ruins containing highly advanced technology left by an extinct advanced race called the Jain has been found on worlds throughout the galaxy. However, it appears that the Jain purposely left this technology knowing that its use by any future races would only lead to their ultimate destruction.

Through continuous flashbacks between past, near past and the present the story unfolds through the eyes and memories of the main character Ursula Ossect Treloon, who after surviving a period of ennui that happens to the long-lived, with AI's permission has used her lifetime's amassed fortune to gather 800 others like herself to set up a colony on Threpsis, a remote and very hostile world away from most Polity AI control. She and the members of her colony hope to find a path to a more human existence. Under a blazing sun, all lifeforms on the desert-like planet are hostile and deadly, forcing the colonists to turn to the one non-colonist and Polity provided enigmatic scientist Oren Salazar to provide upgraded nanosuites to enhance their makeup and the makeup of their crops in order to adapt and survive. But there is one nightmarish life form, an apex predator or cacoraptor, that begins to kill and consume the colonists; a life form that is able to quickly adapt to outmaneuver any defenses the colonists can throw up, and whose sole focus seems to be the eradication of the colonists. After the raptors destroy the colonies means of escape off the planet, it seems inevitable that Ursula and her dwindling number of colonists will have to request the Polity retrieve them from Threpsis. However, before the colony can be rescued, another hostile galactic race, the Prador, is met by the Polity and a galactic war breaks out in which the Polity is soon at a disadvantage against the Prador's invincible ship armor. With hope of rescue gone, the remaining colonists face another threat when a damaged Prador shuttle lands near the colony and Ursula and the remaining colonists must give up more and more of their humanity and turn to evermore drastic nano augmentation to survive the onslaught of the raptors and hopefully attack and defeat the Prador in order to take their ship and leave the planet. And, Ursula continues to question why AI scans of Threpsis supposedly never revealed the existence of the raptors or of Jain technological ruins on the planet.

There is non-stop action throughout the book, which crosses the boundaries between Science Fiction and Horror, much like the Alien franchise. It is well worth a read and I'm looking forward to other books by the author set in the Polity universe.

September 3, 2023Report this review