I’m not usually one for the sci-fi thriller genre, but the combination of 1) written by a woman, 2) in the 90s, 3) with a bisexual female protagonist, made me pull this one off the used bookstore shelf. And it’s wild and weird and maybe a little aimless in the storyline, but ultimately enjoyable and unique nonetheless. Maybe I’d even give it a 3.5.
Reva, our protagonist, has the coolest ability ever: she can shift between different possible timelines. Of course this is not so cool because you have a tendency to lose people - ok, that’s a bummer. Perhaps this is why Reva has ended up as an assassin? Anyway, that’s where she’s at when the story begins, completing a job while running afoul of a very warlike alien called Yavobo and getting distracted by Lish, a local smuggler who doesn’t seem to know what she’s doing. This bugs Reva for some reason, and she decides to break a personal rule and stick around in this particular timeline to help Lish out.
There’s a bunch else going on in the background about the local smuggling and crime network, which tbh didn’t do much for me, but seemed like pretty standard thriller stuff handled reasonably well. Sometimes crime happens in “the Net” in a super concretely visualized, very cyberpunk-esque kinda way, which was amusing. My favorite bits were parts of the world-building: like, for example the world this story takes place on is a water-world and people (some of them) have developed gills and an underwater sign language. One of the characters, Karuu, is a kind of walrus creature. Lish and her friend Devin come from a culture that has a very distinct caste system and ceremony around partnership. And another character, Vask Kastlin, can do a version of stepping out of time that’s close but not the same as Reva’s power.
You can tell there’s a lot going on, right?? And I haven’t even named half of it. This book is funny in that there are a bunch of plot lines that start and sort of peter out...while others begin, are dropped for a while, and come back in toward the end. The central challenge is whether or not Reva will stay in her current timeline, the “Mainline”, and you know, have friends and care about people. So that stays true but there’s a BUNCH else all around it. I found it to be an interesting reading experience though sometimes hard to remember what was at stake.
Still, I really haven’t read anything else like it, so high marks for that. The book brings everything to a reasonably satisfactory end, though does tag a little epilogue on as if the story was going to continue. I checked if it did which is how I found out that supposedly, over 20 years later, another book in this world is coming? I’ll admit, my interest is piqued.