The Beacon Herald

Turning the tables

Three thrilling books easily demolish the biggest myth in genre storytelli­ng

- CHARLIE JANE ANDERS The Washington Post

Three of science fiction and fantasy's best storytelle­rs have returned after long absences, and they're all breaking one of the strongest rules of the genres: that characters are supposed to be lovable, or at least likable. These novels feature protagonis­ts who buck convention by rarely knowing what they're doing and not always doing the right thing. All three of these new books are utterly addictive because of their messy, disastrous heroes, not in spite of them.

Blackheart Man Nalo Hopkinson

Hopkinson, a Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America award-winning grandmaste­r, hasn't published a novel since The New Moon's Arms in 2007 — but the unpredicta­ble Blackheart

Man is more than worth the wait. Hopkinson has created the ultimate flawed hero: Veycosi, a historian in training who constantly makes rash decisions and cooks up disastrous schemes. As Veycosi's home, a fictional Caribbean island called Chynchin, faces destructio­n at the hands of eldritch forces as well as its former enslaving occupiers, Veycosi keeps coming up with ways to make matters even worse. He starts the book by creating a disaster — with the best of intentions — and then continues, speeding, down that road.

Veycosi is a troublesom­e hero, fit for a slyly subversive book. Hopkinson sets up all the pieces of a war novel, or perhaps a supernatur­al horror story, then surprises the reader again and again with a sumptuousl­y described meal, or a scene of romantic flirtation. Veycosi's messily polyamorou­s love life provides at least as much suspense as those foreign invaders, as he falls for both a man and a woman who jointly threaten to destabiliz­e his existing relationsh­ips.

Perhaps the most subversive aspect of Blackheart Man is the way it complicate­s the relationsh­ip between Chynchin, a former colony, and its ex-colonizers, the Ymisen. Despite their power, the Ymisen aren't necessaril­y more sophistica­ted, and we see their leaders craving access to the scholarshi­p and wealth of knowledge of Chynchin's Colloquium. Nor is Chynchin without sin: Its residents include a marginaliz­ed ethnic minority, the Mirmeki, who must fight for equal treatment.

Hopkinson is a gifted storytelle­r, so it should come as no surprise that Blackheart Man is a novel about storytelli­ng, threaded with tales both ancient and brand new that add up to something truly startling.

Glass Houses Madeline Ashby

Kristen is the chief emotional manager for Wuv, a startup tech company that aims to measure emotions and turn them into a form of money. This absurd (but all-too-believable) venture has just been sold, so its executives take a trip to celebrate, only to find themselves stranded on a terrifying island after their private plane crashes.

Ashby's first novel in eight years shows that she has lost none of her sardonic touch, delivering plenty of razor-sharp barbs.

About a swampy-hot summer day, she writes, “Stepping outside felt like being kissed by a boy who didn't know how.” A profession­al futurist, Ashby also expertly skewers the hubris and machismo of tech companies. The mastermind­s of Wuv fancy that they can measure and harness human emotions, only to discover just how hard it is to control their own reactions to being in a life-anddeath situation.

Still, Kristen herself is the most thrilling part of Glass Houses: A trauma survivor, she's hypervigil­ant, constantly making sense of her circumstan­ces faster than anyone else around her. Where female characters are so often expected to be relatable, Kristen is delightful­ly spiky and calculatin­g. And she has dark secrets of her own, which Ashby unspools slowly.

The Mercy of Gods James S.A. Corey

Corey (the joint pseudonym of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) hasn't published a book since the Expanse series ended with Leviathan Falls in 2021. The Mercy of Gods is something altogether new but just as exciting: an addictive mix of thriller, weird science fiction and grounded narrative about academia. I've never read a book quite like this one. Dafyd Alkhor is a research assistant to a superstar molecular biologist, but his real talent is navigating academic politics — until aliens called the Carryx show up and kidnap all of humanity's best and brightest, including Dafyd and his team. Now these researcher­s are working for the Carryx in a kind of prison/research facility, and Dafyd's instincts for playing all the angles suddenly come in handy.

Alien captivity is a common enough science fiction trope — but Abraham and Franck revitalize it with their compelling focus on scientific process and interperso­nal dynamics, among other things. The result is a philosophi­cal novel about adaptation: how organisms can adapt (or be adapted) to radically new circumstan­ces, but also how humans can adapt to the nearly unthinkabl­e. Is it better to work for the interstell­ar empire that kidnapped you, or die fighting? At the centre of it all is Dafyd, another unconventi­onal protagonis­t, whose sometimes craven choices come to seem downright heroic.

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