stoutfellow: Joker (Default)
[personal profile] stoutfellow
I have a certain fondness for the SF of Timothy Zahn. I can't call him a great writer; his prose is usually pedestrian and his characterizations no more than adequate. But he's a capable craftsman, and occasionally shows flashes of something more. ("The Final Report on the Lifeline Experiment" is a very nice meditation on ethics and the demands of honesty, and there's one passage in the novel Warhorse that I think quite good. If you know the book, it's Chapter 23 - the encounter with the first shark, and with the second.) He plots well, specializing in that special subgenre of SF in which the interest lies in figuring out what's going on, and what to do about it.

The Green and the Gray is one of his recent works, and a good example. It tells the story of a - young? middle-aged? somewhere in between - married couple who, returning one evening from a play (she liked it, he didn't), are accosted by a mugger. The mugger, instead of taking anything from them, insists that they take charge of a young woman with a badly bruised throat. Events spiral outward; the two learn of the presence in New York City of not one but two alien races who had fled, separately, from a disastrous war between their peoples. Until just recently the two sets of refugees had been unaware of each other's presence; now, it looks as though the war will resume, with the people of New York City caught in the middle.

The truth that needs to be recognized and dealt with in this story is particularly intricate: the origins of the two races, the causes of the war, the maneuverings of the various factions... It's a bit talky at times, but there's enough misdirection and intrigue to make up for that. I enjoyed it quite a bit.

What pleases me most about the story is that, despite efforts on both sides to keep the crisis secret, the New York police do get involved. This isn't Sunnydale. The cops recognize that something is coming down; some of them figure out a good deal of the truth; and their presence is, as it should be, critical to the ultimate resolution.

Date: 2006-04-02 04:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hornedhopper.livejournal.com
You've reeled me in on The Green and the Gray. I'll look for it after I read my stack.

Date: 2006-04-02 06:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kd5mdk.livejournal.com
I generally like Zahn's writing. None of the other Star Wars authors (except Michael Stackpole) have been near as good in my experience, and I enjoyed the Conquerors Trilogy and Blackcollar stories. The Cobra stories haven't worked as well, but still generally enjoyable, and I really do like the challenges he presents of integrating people who are in a great many ways "better" into a normal human society.

Date: 2006-04-02 06:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thebluerose.livejournal.com
I also enjoyed this when I read it. I read I think it was the Conqueror trilogy and enjoyed them, and have also picked up Mantas Gift and Angelmass. Both good reads, which lead me to reading the Green and the Gray.

Date: 2006-04-04 09:36 pm (UTC)
filkferengi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] filkferengi
So, you're posting an entertaining review of sf, to a song about a ghetto? And here I thought we'd come so far. [pouts] In honor of sf's increased status in our society, you could've at least been listening to the theme from "The Jeffersons." :)

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