I'd seen this book mentioned a few times on various Best Of SFR lists, especially on The Galaxy Express, so when I decided to embark on my little summer adventure, I was very happy to find my local library had a copy of this book.
I'm even happier now that they had a copy, because this was a thoroughly enjoyable read for me. :)
The story begins when the warp drive--and only the warp drive--from a long lost space ship reappears in the United Colonies. The engine is accompanied by three dead bodies and a row boat, and its outer compartment is crusted over with barnacles. The United Colonies decide to send Mikhail Volkov, cloned son of the ruler of the Novaya Rus empire, and his foster brother, Turk, to follow the coordinates from the mysterious warp drive. They must find out what happened with the warp drive, where the missing ship landed and whether solving those mysteries can help save the human race from being wiped out by a hostile race of aliens called the Nefrim.
The mission starts off badly as Mikhail's ship follows the coordinates and immediately ends up crashing into the "Endless Blue" of the water planet Sargasso. Turk is separated from the rest of the crew and presumed dead, which causes Mikhail to teeter on the brink of emotional collapse. Turk manages to survive when he is rescued by Paige Bailey, the captain of a cobbled together ship on its way to a sweet salvage spot in neutral waters.
A big strength of this book are the characters. The three main characters of this book were all well-drawn and complex, and the supporting characters are well-fleshed out as well. Mikhail has the Great Man's Son complex except, being a clone, he IS in some ways the great man, which only serves to further mess with his head. His psyche and mental health are also very fragile and he does, to a large extent, lean on his foster brother, Turk, as his rock and emotional center. There's a poignant scene after he thinks Turk has died where Mikhail locks his gun in his safe and: "Using a marker, he wrote 'Bad Misha Bad' and drew Turk's cat face scowling at him" to stop himself from committing suicide. Even when Mikhail thinks Turk is dead he still depends on his brother to save him from himself.
Turk, for his part, has an inferiority complex and a healthy amount of self-loathing because he was genetically engineered in a breeding creche to be a super-soldier. Turk is a "Red" and in his world the genetically modified Reds, even though they were engineered from human genes, are viewed as lower class and expendable to their fully human commanders. There is even a sexual fetish for Red males from a group called "cat-fanciers". Reds have the ability to "fur over" in times of stress, which contributes to the conception of them as animals. So, even though Turk was raised alongside Mikhail as his foster brother, that does not stop Turk from internalizing all the vitriol and bigotry running rampant in his world with regards to Reds.
The blurb for this book mentions nothing about the romantic subplot, so when I started the book I didn't know who would end up in the romance together. The logical, the cliche, pairing would have been Mikhail and Paige, so I was pleasantly surprised when Turk and Paige ended up falling for each other. Turk is adorable and heart-breaking as he tries to navigate romantic love with someone who sees him as a human and not a really fancy sex toy.
"...he continued upward until she was totally under him....Even the kinkiest of cat fanciers would be afraid of being under him, helpless, but she continued to gaze up at him as if she trusted him completely....
He wasn't sure what to do next. She hadn't pushed him off her, or told him to stop, but she was paying more attention to her reader than to him....She didn't move her foot, and the tips of her toes remained a hairsbreadth from his leg. It made him aware that a moment before, they had been casually intimate, like old lovers. The loss of that closeness ached inside, and slowly turned to anger. Was she just playing him?
'Why are you reading those books?' he growled lowly.
'They're in Russian. I thought if you ended up stuck with us, you should have someone that could speak your language...'"
The romance takes a bit of a backseat towards the end of the book, but the middle section is very romance heavy, and that romance is remarkably sweet and poignant. The moment where Turk and Mikhail are reunited and Turk realizes he will probably have to choose between his brother and the woman he loves was well-written and affecting.
This book is very complex with all kinds of twisty turns so I won't go into the plot too much at the risk of spoilers. I will say I loved the complexity of the world. The concept of the crashed space ships all becoming sort of sovereign nations on the wide Sargasso sea was brilliant, and I loved the complex kin network of the Baileys. I also appreciated that the biggest power on Sargasso was actually the Japanese with their twin crashed ships at Ya-ya port. The alien species of the Sargasso were also very well-drawn, distinct and believable.
I also liked that Paige was as well developed and capable as the male characters. She has an aptitude for languages and watching her translate and interact with the alien species littering the Sargasso was one of my favorite parts of the book. I appreciated how each alien species had a different body language and mindset, and Paige really immersed herself in them when she was translating. This part of the book was very well done indeed.
One small nitpick I had about the world-building was it came a bit too fast for me in the beginning, especially the first chapter where the reader is introduced to the Sargasso, which is not your average planet. I felt like I had no idea what was going on, and it was not until several chapters later in the book that I really understood how the structure of the Sargasso works. Another problem I had was we never really got a clear description of the Reds in the beginning, so I was actually picturing Turk and the others as much more animal-like until we were in Paige's POV and we see Turk through her eyes, which is several chapters in. (Just as an aside, I really loved the revelation of Turk's full name. It was cute, affectionate and somehow sad, all at once).
On the whole, though, this book was really excellent. The characters were original and engaging, the romance sweet, the plot complex and enjoyable, the writing amusing and well-done, and the world-building superb overall. I will definitely be checking out more books by Wen Spencer in the future, and I definitely recommend this to any SFR fans who haven't read it yet.
Grade: A