“You think you escaped from Earth? You’re fools, every one of you. All you did was bring it with you.”
Centuries ago, the Old World (Earth) was not only dying but corrupt. Before the planet - an humanity - ultimately collapses, a large group of cultists boarded a generation ship with the aim of saving humanity, not just any humans but only those who were free of sin and had a perfect DNA. This ship was called Arkhangelsk. The cultists succeeded in settling in a frozen country that is very much not-Earth-like. The thing is, the settlement has been found, and maybe all those people who were told that the Old World was dead and they were the only humans alive were wrong (or lied to).
So, Bonesteel had an amazing idea here. It took a while for the book to get started and I can say the first 100 pages were very much world-building and getting to know what is what and who is who. The book has two POVs, one being Anya who is from the settlement, and the other one is Maddie, the Captain of the ship from Earth, the Hypatia. The two characters are physically similar, but their personalities and how they see the world are very much someone from Earth (emotional, sarcastic, open-minded) and someone who has been raised in a more dictatorial environment (a yes ma’am). Anya isn’t entirely a rule follower because she’s got strong morals, or she is portrayed that way in her POVs, but when we see her from Maddie’s POV, that morality and stubbornness are just incredibly subtle, which has been very cool to see.
Now, I won’t go into detail about the book because there is a lot going on. It’s a strange mix of world planetary romance (that is, an adventure that happens on a planet with extreme or exotic environments, here being how everything is frozen), mystery (disappearances, a possible murder, the Exiles…), and political intrigue. But it was also very much about human dynamics, which was sort of cool if it weren’t for how… apathetic the characters were. I love Bonesteel’s stories, but her writing is detailed, her stories slow, and the characters are quite dry or bland (or maybe it just lacks humor, though Maddie had a few good lines here and there).
The story also had a few question marks for me. I didn’t quite understand key points of the story such as what Maddie and her crew were doing, or why Yulia was so worried about who would come after. In addition. The whole Maddie stuff made little sense - they were trained when they were under 15 and they cannot hear back from Earth, so I’m just confused at how focused they are on their mission. I get why she was chosen as Captain, but how does she know how to be Captain? She’s never interacted with anyone outside the ship after they left Earth (other than sending letters without getting a reply). And, following this thought - considering they know they won’t see another sunrise nor see Earth again (or chances are that), why did no one consider just staying in the planet from the get go? AND, what/who is the Colonel? Did I miss the description? I somehow understood he was like an AI thing. But then he turned out to have a tube connected somewhere and could cry? I was so confused.
Some bits like the inside of the ship and how the ship lands rubbed the wrong way - ships don’t land on their stomach. And stairs and lifts may be needed not for atrophy but because of gravity. Gravity is barely mentioned which I think would have been interesting, and when it is brought up as a plot device it made no sense (to me).
Also 1) I hated Aleksei from second one and 2) we need to stop it with the breeding stuff in sci-fi please it is nightmar fuel for me at this point.
Favorite bits:
I’ve always known, Vostochny, that we’d be asking Hina to shoulder an unforgivable burden. That she’d be piloting Hypatia home for us, and that most likely she’d be watching all of us die along the way. But I never really felt that until today. And...I don’t think I know how to ask her to do that anymore.
—
“How is it humanity did not die out?”
“As far as I know, we survived the way we always do.”
“How is that?”
“Dumb luck.”
—
Apparently my plan to spike nuke that whole fucking city seemed extreme to the others, because they locked me up for a while. Six whole days, in fact.