This one hit the sweet spot for me. An imaginative tale of desperate missions of individual lives colliding with the compelling need to work collaboratively to save the human race, all placed in the frame on an unusual murder mystery.
Vinge had already used the concept of stasis fields, called bobbles, as a one-way time machine to the future to good effect in his “The Peace War”. The plot there involved a government, the Peace Federation, taking over by bobbling up armies, nukes, government headquarters of their enemies for an extended stay, and a plucky band that leads an heroic revolt against this tyranny. This book continues to harness the bobble tech in a myriad more brilliant ways.
In the universe of this book, the hero, Wil, is from the 80’s, the time Vinge was writing this book. As a police detective he made some enemies and ended up getting bobbled into a distant future in a subversion of official government uses of the technology. The problem with these exports of problem people is that their emergence from the bobbles beyond a few centuries finds an earth devoid of people, with only theories as to what happened to the human race. Wil ends up at a 25-million year future staging point for people bobbling forward over the span of three centuries before the Singularity. The leader of a high tech faction, Yelen Korolev, is starting a colony to rebuild the race and needs to recruit at least 100 more people to reach the 300 required for sufficient genetic diversity to assure success in rebooting humanity.
A bobble from the former Peace Federation is discovered, timed to open a 1,000 years hence. . So the incipient colonists bobble forward to that time, only to discover Yelen’s lover was left alone outside the bobble (aka marooned in realtime), where she eked out a primitive existence. The saboteur responsible is no less than a murderer. Wil’s special expertise is tapped Yelen to solve the crime. Solving it is expected to have the larger benefit of netting people whose aim is to make sure the colony effort fails.
If that seems quite an astounding set up for a murder mystery, the nailing down of motive, means, and opportunity among a bizarre range of suspects reaches even more into remarkable territory. One high-tech faction wants to bobble along into the future like tourists and keep going to witness the end of the universe. One artist nature lover may want all humans exterminated. One man, with possible accolytes, believes humanity disappeared with the Rapture of the Second Coming and expects another chance. Another faction believes an alien attack accounts for both the Singularity and threats to the band of survivors. For the investigation Wil is assigned the help of Della, a 9,000 year old soldier woman who has spent many years exploring galactic space for possible alien enemies. She is so weird and wired up with computers, Wil can’t help but keep her on his suspect list. All the while he investigates by interview, analyzing written records left by Yelen’s partner, and looking for cyber footprints of sabotage, he also can’t help trying to find the criminal responsible for his own shanghai and tragic life separation from wife and children. Meanwhile, the militaristic Peace Federation shows signs of wanting to take over the running of the motley band.
The characters may be a bit simplistic for many and the dialog a bit wooden, but I was well satisfied with the rich play of ideas for harnessing tech advances to save the future. Pretty good projections from Vinge’s point before the Internet was invented. It seemed sad but true that even with species survival at stake, the human proclivity for intrigue and scheming for power would remain such a challenge as portrayed here. Still we get a hopeful feeling out of the tale and not the grim dog-eat-dog crumble of civilization in many an apocalyptic or dystopian story written in recent years.