[extropy-chat] BOOK REVIEW: Damien Broderick's GODPLAYERS -- A review by Rich Horton

mike99 mike99 at lascruces.com
Thu Jun 16 22:19:03 UTC 2005


http://www.sfsite.com/06b/gp202.htm

Godplayers

Damien Broderick

Thunder's Mouth Press, 328 pages

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Damien Broderick Bio:
Some consider Damien Broderick to be Australia's premier SF novelist. He is
the author of many non-fiction books on science, technology, and culture. He
grew up in Reservoir, attended a seminary for a while and spent a fair bit
of time at Monash University. Assorted careers -- including computer
programming and editing a national magazine -- led him to writing. His works
include The Judas Mandala and The Dreaming Dragons.
ISFDB Bibliography
SF Site Review: Transcension
SF Site Review: Not the Only Planet
SF Site Review: The White Abacus



 A review by Rich Horton




Damien Broderick is an Australian (now resident in Texas) who has published
a number of well-regarded SF novels (such as The White Abacus), but who has
not quite established a popular reputation. He is also a justly respected
critic. I don't want to predict that Godplayers will be the book that will
take off commercially -- there's no predicting such things. But it wouldn't
surprise me -- this is an extremely energetic and engaging novel, one in
which the author is obviously having fun, and just as obviously a work by a
writer who knows and loves the field. (As his afterword explicitly notes.)

The main action of the novel follows a young man from Australia named August
Seebeck. His parents disappeared, presumed dead, when he was a boy, and he
was raised by relatives, in particular his Aunt Miriam and later his
Great-Aunt Tansy. He comes home to Tansy's house after herding cattle in the
outback, to find that she claims dead bodies have been showing up in her
bathtub. She's a bit dotty, and works as a psychic, so he tends to discount
this, and goes to wash up. And naturally a dead body shows up soon after,
carried through the mirror by two women, one of whom, Lune, is sufficiently
beautiful that August is drastically smitten despite the unfortunate
circumstances of their meeting. Especially when he notices that she has the
same curious metallic design in her foot that he has. But Lune and her
companion inform him that they will have to wipe his memory, and out comes
the "green ray"...

Mysteriously, the memory wipe doesn't stick. Quickly August is involved in
some very strange doings indeed. He tries to follow the mysterious women
through the mirror, and in very rapid order indeed he is jumping from
universe to universe. It soon comes clear that August is part of a family he
has not suspected (the other members have significant names like Maybelline,
and Juni, and Marchmain... see the pattern?), and that the family is engaged
in something called the Contest of Worlds.

And so the novel goes, recomplicating again and again, as August desperately
tries to make sense of things, to find his Aunt Tansy, and to learn the
secret behind his new family and his parents' disappearance. He's also
trying to forge a relationship with the beautiful Lune (one that develops
perhaps just a bit implausibly quickly). In the process we visit numerous
parallel worlds, and several different "levels" of the universe -- mostly
based on real (if perhaps not precisely mainstream) physical theories. It's
all great fun, very fast moving, clever stuff.

The afterword mentions as influences Fritz Leiber and Roger Zelazny.
"Destiny Times Three" is the Leiber story Broderick mentions, while the
obvious Zelazny parallel is Amber. And indeed the novel recalls those
writers a bit, as well as perhaps Charles Stross' new series that has also
been compared to Amber, The Merchant Princes. But Broderick's work is not
simply hommage, nor is it derivative -- it is original SF that happily nods
to its precursors. And it is, put simply, purely fun, and at the same time
intriguing speculative SF.


Copyright © 2005 Rich Horton
Rich Horton is an eclectic reader in and out of the SF and fantasy genres.
He's been reading SF since before the Golden Age (that is, since before he
was 13). Born in Naperville, IL, he lives and works (as a Software Engineer
for the proverbial Major Aerospace Company) in St. Louis area and is a
regular contributor to Tangent. Stop by his website at
http://www.sff.net/people/richard.horton.






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