Can humanity terraform Europa into a moon better fit for human habitation, or will the potential of alien life mean Jupiter’s moon needs to be preserved for all time? Interesting questions for sure, both of which are brought up in Charles Sheffield’s Cold as Ice hard scifi novel. Unfortunately, the two hooks established early on in the novel are not the direction the story takes, and a potential for a true classic of hard scifi is squandered in a glacially slow plotline. This novel had just enough to keep me interested, though that was largely based on the teased promises of exploring far more interesting concepts. It’s a story that I liked, barely, and one that picks up the pace in the last third of the novel, veering into a plot thread that, while not as interesting as the potential hooks from the beginning, were enjoyable enough.
Cold as Ice begins the story in a solar system beset by a great interplanetary war between Earth and the outer planets. We are set twenty-five years after those events, but the effects of the war still linger. On Earth, Jon Perry and Nell Cotter explore the ocean’s depth in a submersible. Near Ganymede, Camille Hamilton and David Lammerman explore deep space through the eyes of an advanced telescope. In Jupiter’s atmosphere, Wilsa Sheer explores the dense clouds as she is inspired to compose her next orchestra piece. The characters are called from their careers and brought together, sometimes in competition with one another, by the great Cyrus Mobarak, the man who perfected the fusion power system, and Hilda Brandt, Europa’s science administrator. We also have Rustem Battachayria, a reclusive cyber sleuth with an obsession for puzzles and collectible relics from the war.
All interesting characters for sure, except perhaps for Wilsa Sheer, who serves no real purpose in the plot. The story is interesting enough to keep us reading, but much of the novel is getting all the characters into place, which takes too long for the shorter length of this book. The story meanders from one character to another with nothing really happening until near the end. It does get a little more exciting in the climax as the pace picks up and we finally have some movement in the story, as well as some answers to the lingering questions in the plot.
If you’re expecting this book to be about finding life on Europa, or terraforming Europa, this ultimately is not that novel. But man, what an awesome story it would have been if that were the case. Sadly, that doesn’t happen and instead we get an interesting enough novel, but not one that is noteworthy. Would I recommend this novel? Probably not, but I also wouldn’t advise someone against reading it. It was fine. I liked it enough that it barely managed three stars.