Chek-ooo! Kak!
'Semiosis' is an astounding science fiction read. There are so many ideas written into the plot book clubs could extend discussions of the book to two nights! Yet YA readers will have lots of action and suspense to enjoy. Only those readers who dislike generation sagas might be disappointed in the book. However, unlike many sagas, this novel is fast-paced and character-driven.
The author concentrates on a few characters from several generations in the establishment of a human colony on a newly discovered planet full of plant life with varying degrees of sentience. Social drama is the focus rather than the colony's historical development, although the colony's history is also told by the drama and struggles of each generation, narrated in separate chapters by different characters.
Quoted from page 14:
""I was dreaming about children," she said.
We'd talked a lot about children. They'd grow up in this gravity, so they'd be shorter, adapted to their environment, and belong to Pax. Just Pax. Her Ireland and my Mexico wouldn't mean anything to them. I held her tighter.
"Pax will be home."I lay still, knowing that she tended to wake up suddenly and would fall asleep again just as suddenly. In the dark I could see little of the improvised hut that was now our home.
We had not expected paradise. We had expected hardship, danger, and potential failure. We hoped to create a new society in full harmony with nature, but nineteen people had died of accidents and illnesses since we arrived, including three who had died before for no apparent reason."
Octavo, the colony's biologist who is narrating the above excerpt, is very worried.
Quoted from page 34:
""Plants are not that smart." [says a Parent colonist]
"They adapt," [Octavo] said. "They evolve." At the university, we had joked about the ways plants abused insects to make them carry pollen or seeds, but insects were small. On Pax, the snow vines were enormous. Next to them, humans and fippokats were insects, objects to abuse."
Quoted from page 37:
"The snow vines had learned fast, too. They had realized that we are like fippokats and used us like them, giving us healthy or poisonous fruit. But the west vine had attacked our fields. It had noticed how we differed from fippokats, that we are farmers, and it had developed a plan that required conspicuous effort on its part. Creative, original ideas and perseverance were signs of intelligence--real intelligence, insightful. It had weighed possible courses of action, then chosen one."
Play ominous music now. Ok, then. Maybe they can reach an accommodation. People DO make something plants like, besides the having of the ability to irrigate and prune - dead people. We make great fertilizer.
: )
Fippokats are furry green house-cat-sized herbivores who hop like springboks. They are easy to train and they enjoy sitting in human laps to be petted. They are also good to eat. I want one, actually - to pet, not eat!
The "Parents" - the first generation of colonists - mean well, and they do not condone violence, but they are intensely ideological to the point of requiring an obedience to their social ideals over facts, whether those facts be of human or environmental nature.
The second generation of colonists eventually realizes that if the colony is to survive, the colony's politics and principles which are rigidly enforced by the first generation have to be bent to the realities of the environment on the new planet. The second generation also recognizes they all brought unalterable human emotions within themselves from Earth, despite their efforts to reboot social mores.
Then, the plucky human community learns they were not the first space travellers to land on this planet...
Eep!
The "Parents" reminded me of what I have read about the first generation of Communists in the 1920's, or of the revolutionaries of 18th-century French Revolution, blended with the ideas of 20th-century farming communes and later, hippies.
I really liked this book! It is very well-written with extremely interesting world-building. It is graphic in a few scenes, and there is violence and murder. My favorite plant was Stevland (who demonstrated the most personal growth of any character - *snicker*), and my favorite human was Higgins. Of the Glassmaker Queens of course I liked curly-haired See-You best! As far as how I feel about the dastardly orange trees - hissssss, boooo!