After Atlas is a 2016 science fiction novel by British writer Emma Newman. It was first published in the United States as a paperback original in November 2016 by Roc Books...

After Atlas is the second book in Newman's four-book Planetfall series, and takes place on Earth forty years after the spaceship Atlas departed to find God in the first book, Planetfall. - Wikipedia

Whilst I really enjoyed Planetfall, this dystopian noir murder mystery loose sequel to it, was even better. Published in 2016, but sadly, the repressive gov-corp world ruled entirely by profit imagined here in the middle of the 22nd century seems even more likely now, though I hope it does not come to pass.

#EmmaNewman #SciFi #Novels #Reading #Dystopia #Planetfall

Once again I arrive late in discovering some high quality science fiction. Met Emma Newman through her podcast with Adrian Tchaikovsky and have since immersed myself in her Planetfall novels. Was hooked by the second, loved the third and now have only Atlas Alone to look forward to. Proper, thoughtful scifi. #Bookstodon #ScienceFiction #EmmaNewman

Planetfall is a 2015 science fiction novel by British writer Emma Newman.

I love this tale set on a far distant planet with a mysterious city that managed to put some different twists on familiar tropes and really empathised with Ren the central character.

#emmanewman #planetfall #scifi

Generative KI bedroht die Existenz von Kreativen, warnt Autorin Emma Newman. Sie kritisiert KI-generierte Hörbücher als Gefahr für menschliche Kunst und kulturelle Vielfalt. Als Sprecherin kämpft sie bereits um finanzielle Stabilität und sieht die Entwicklung als Schlag gegen Künstler.innen. Newman fordert, den Wert menschlicher Kreativität anzuerkennen und politisch zu schützen, um die kulturelle Landschaft vor Verarmung zu bewahren.

#EmmaNewman #GenerativeKI #Kreative #Kultur #DigitaleEthik

https://enewman.co.uk/rage-rage-against-the-dying-of-the-mic/

Rage, rage against the dying of the mic!

Look, I have a book I should be writing, but I have so many other words screaming in my head that I need to write them down first. Buckle up, my darlings, because this post is breaking my social media rule of ‘Try to only be positive online’. I'm angry

Emma Newman's Place

The Kraken Wakes

Adrian Tchaikovsky announced the other day that he and Emma Newman were starting a new podcast: Starship Alexandria, where they will take turns recommending sci-fi and fantasy books, with most of the episode devoted to discussing them. Their first episode dropped a couple of weeks ago, and Newman made the first recommendation: The Kraken Wakes by John Wyndham.

This is a classic science fiction novel from 1953 that I had never heard of. I had heard of Wyndham and a few of his other books but not this particular one. The story sounded interesting so I decided to check it out.

Whenever I read old novels, particularly sci-fi, I’m reminded of how tight old school writing used to be, and how fast paced the books were. This is no exception. The story told here in 246 pages is one that would take at least 500 pages with contemporary approaches, assuming it wasn’t made into a trilogy or larger series. There’s a lot to be said for telling an epic scale story in a manner that can be completed in a couple of days.

This is an alien invasion story, but with a twist. It begins with fireballs entering the atmosphere. All of them go into the sea, entering the deepest parts of the oceans. The selectivity implies an intelligence behind whatever is going on. A few of the fireballs are shot at, and immediately explode, implying they were containers under high pressure.

Attempts are made to send submersibles down to the ocean depths, but whatever is down there destroys them, killing the crew. When ships passing over the deep regions start to be attacked and sunk, various militaries send atomic bombs down. A few make it down and detonate. But at some point, the bombs stop detonating, as though something is capturing and disabling them. As the sinkings become increasingly common, ships start having to avoid the deepest parts of the ocean, crashing world trade.

All of this takes place over a period of years. The story is told through the eyes of Mike Watson. He and his wife Phyllis work in Britain as reporters for the EBC, a fictional competitor to the BBC. Mike and Phyllis are at a few key events in the story, but most of the narrative is based on news from around the world as they’re able to glean it.

This book has some interesting innovations for a 1953 novel. The invaders’ technology is very alien. Their method of attacking ships appears to be based on some kind of focused vibrations. At a certain point they send biological robots to attack island and coastal regions. And eventually, they attack humanity by melting the polar ice caps, causing sea levels worldwide to rise. It’s hard to read these portions of the novel today without thinking about climate change.

The most interesting thing about this novel is how little is able to be learned about the aliens, and how people react to the limited information. For a long time there is a debate whether it even is aliens. Conspiracy theories run rampant before the evidence becomes overwhelming.

There is speculation that their natural habitat must be a high pressure one, possibly Jupiter. (This is never confirmed, saving the novel from being too outdated.) Which, it is thought, is why they target the deepest regions of Earth’s oceans. Early on there are arguments about whether, due to the different environment they live in, there’s any necessary reason for hostilities between them and humanity.

A recurring theme in the book is how people react over the years as information becomes available, and to proposals about what needs to be done. Politics, business interests, and just overall refusal to accept what’s happening, keep getting in the way. This happens so much throughout the novel, that if I’d read it before Covid, I might have found it too cynical. Today it seems prescient.

Of course, Wyndham was writing this book in the early Cold War years, when memory of World War II was still fresh. His memories of those events would include the often ugly realities, instead of the heroic stories most of us grew up with. Strangely enough, I find it comforting to realize people in the past were just as blinkered in their reactions.

A minor spoiler. We never meet the aliens. There is never a conversation with them. They’re just too different. They are only known through their effects. The closest we get is speculation about what they might be like. I’m generally not a fan of sci-fi that never shows the damn aliens. (It seems like it became a popular move after 2001 A Space Odyssey, but Kubrick didn’t show his aliens because 1960s technology couldn’t do it well.) That said, in this book it ends up fitting with the theme of having to work with limited information.

Overall I enjoyed the book and recommend it. The Godzilla theme song kept running through my head as I read it. It had that kind of feel. (BTW, Godzilla Minus One, if you haven’t seen it yet, a damn good movie!)

Often when I recommend old books, it has to be with caveats about the quality of the writing or social attitudes in the story, but not this time. It’s aged relatively well. Which isn’t to say it isn’t very dated, but not in a way that I found too distracting.

Worth checking out if you’d like a quick read!

#AdrianTchaikovsky #Aliens #EmmaNewman #podcasts #sciFi #ScienceFiction #StarshipAlexandria

Adrian Tchaikovsky (@aptshadow.bsky.social)

Big, somewhat leftfield news: I am kicking off a podcast with the wonderful @emmanewman.bsky.social under the title Starship Alexandria. It's a cosy book and film recommendation show where we take it in turns to rec things to one another and discuss them.

Bluesky Social

For all Science Fiction fans out there, here’s a brand new Podcast, co-hosted by Adrian Tchaikovsky and Emma Newman. It was really good and will both remind you of books you’ve already read, and/or flag up those you’ve missed! What’s not to like? #ScienceFiction #SciFi #Bookstodon #AdrianTchaikovsky #EmmaNewman
#StarshipAlexandria

Edited to add another #

https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/starship-alexandria/id1806388787

Starship Alexandria

Books Podcast · Monthly · The Sci-fi and Fantasy podcast from the best of futures! In this future, humanity has solved its problems and is now sending spaceships from Earth, not in a desperate attempt to escape the apocalypse…

Apple Podcasts

Author: Emma Newman

Quick Review

Planetfall is a gripping sci-fi novel with a neurodivergent protagonist who is carefully and complexly depicted. The story is heavy with mystery and trauma, and rewards attention to its layers. It’s one of few books I’ve decided to immediately read again.

Rating: 5 out of 5.

On BookWyrm

Description

Renata Ghali believed in Lee Suh-Mi’s vision of a world far beyond Earth, calling to humanity. A planet promising to reveal the truth about our place in the cosmos, untainted by overpopulation, pollution, and war. Ren believed in that vision enough to give up everything to follow Suh-Mi into the unknown.

More than twenty-two years have passed since Ren and the rest of the faithful braved the starry abyss and established a colony at the base of an enigmatic alien structure where Suh-Mi has since resided, alone. All that time, Ren has worked hard as the colony’s 3-D printer engineer, creating the tools necessary for human survival in an alien environment, and harboring a devastating secret.

Ren continues to perpetuate the lie forming the foundation of the colony for the good of her fellow colonists, despite the personal cost. Then a stranger appears, far too young to have been part of the first planetfall, a man who bears a remarkable resemblance to Suh-Mi.

The truth Ren has concealed since planetfall can no longer be hidden. And its revelation might tear the colony apart…

Planetfall

https://apollolemmon.com/2024/12/25/planetfall/ #EmmaNewman #scienceFiction #scifi #speculativeFiction

I've finished: Saturation Point by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Tchaikovsky is at his best at novella length, and when dealing with ecology and evolution.

There are some blunt references to Roadside Picnic by the Strugatsky brothers, I'm glad that I finally got around to reading it this year.

This is a tense book with a nervous protagonist, Emma Newman was a perfect choice as narrator.

https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/e7dccff3-f314-43ff-a3b4-43d54c1b0926

@bookstodon #bookstodon #ScienceFiction #AudioBooks #EmmaNewman #AdrianTchaikovsky

Saturation Point by Adrian Tchaikovsky

A group of scientists and soldiers are hunted by mysterious enemies in a terrifying new climate t...

Listing so I don't forget. This time I didn't hear (read by audiobook):

- in Dee's analysis, the worker bees are consuming educational content. I did hear that they consume more personal (not commercial) mersives.

- members of The Circle are documenting their expertise.

- Atlas confesses it is not only a ship AI and gaming AI but also a therapy bot. I did hear it confess it's not supposed to be there.

#AtlasAlone #EmmaNewman

In this rereading, I'm missing sections I distinctly remember from the first reading and wonder if I've got an abridged copy this time.

#AtlasAlone #EmmaNewman