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‘This is top class SF, intelligent and engaging, and I loved every minute of it’
Adrian Tchaikovsky, award-winning author of Children of Time
Escaping conflict on Earth, an idealistic group of settlers arrive on a distant planet – Pax – with plans for a perfect society.
The world they discover is rich with life, but this is not the Eden they were hoping for. The plants on Pax are smart – smart enough to domesticate, and even slaughter, its many extraordinary animals.
To survive, the colonists realize that they must strike bargains of their own. But if they are to make Pax their home, they must go further, searching for a way to communicate and coexist with these utterly alien intelligences.
336 pages, Kindle Edition
First published February 6, 2018




The snow vines … had realized that we were like the 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 were 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.The repeated shifts to new generations, with almost an entirely new cast of characters coming on stage about every forty pages, also made it more difficult for me to connect with the story. But at about the halfway point, Burke stops skipping forward and focuses in on the events that occur about a hundred years after the humans arrive on Pax, as a new and unexpected set of difficulties pops up. One particularly intelligent plant, manipulative but largely benevolent in its nature, becomes a key character. From this point forward, Semiosis gradually grew on me.