The Cassini Division 136
The Cassini Division | |
author | Ken MacLeod |
pages | 240 |
publisher | Orbit |
rating | 7 |
reviewer | Danny Yee |
ISBN | 1857237307 |
summary | politics in the 24th century |
At the beginning of the 24th century, the inner Solar System is dominated by the socialist Solar Union. Their front-line fighting force, the Cassini Division, defends against viral attacks from post-human Jovians and keeps careful watch on a wormhole. Ellen May Ngwethu, a member of the Division's Central Committee, travels to areas of Earth occupied by "non-cos", low-tech anarchists who still use such antiquated devices as money. Her goal is to find the physicist Malley, whose help is necessary to find a way through the wormhole. And after taking the losing side in a debate over whether to bomb the Jovians or to try to communicate with them, Ellen travels through the wormhole to ultra-capitalist New Mars.
After a slower opening, there largely to link back to earlier books set in the same universe, The Cassini Division rattles along at a good pace. It is not particularly compelling as a novel, however, with no characters that really come to life. Ellen has centre-stage throughout but remains something of a cipher, her dominant feature her dedication to "the true knowledge" on which the Solar Union was founded ("self interest") and her hostility to non-humans, both rooted in her personal history. And none of the other characters gets much play at all. Suze, for example, is a sociologist who joins Ellen early on in the story and has as high a profile in it as anyone else, but she could still have been trivially edited out.
The science is "space opera" style, deployed when necessary for the plot but otherwise passed over, and the intellectual interest comes from the politics. This takes the form of open discussions of political theory and depictions of different forms of social organisation in action, but it never becomes didactic or stodgy. MacLeod himself is a Trotskyist libertarian, a label which gives some feel for his eclecticism, and he depicts very different political systems working reasonably well -- though he often verges on parody. There are also plenty of little jokes, such as a statue of Mises in the Central Planning Committee building.
A significant factor is that aging has been stopped, so many people are centuries old and have political views formed in the 21st century. This makes the recurrence of current political ideologies three centuries down the road more plausible, but it is also a key stabilising factor. Whether in non-co areas of Earth, in the Solar Union, or on New Mars, to a great extent the system works because it's what people are accustomed to. And even the Jovian "fast folk", descendants of humans who moved into computers and experienced a kind of singularity, have some continuity with their past.
Overall? There's not much more to it, but The Cassini Division makes a decently entertaining action story, with plenty of ideas for anyone interested in political theory. I'm not going to rush off and buy Ken MacLeod's other books, but I'll keep an eye out for a chance to borrow them or scam review copies.
You can purchase the The Cassini Division from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Well... (Score:3, Funny)
I thought that comment was a little TOO geeky, but given the crazy rainy weather, I'd have to give some credit to it!
Re:Well... (Score:2)
How about ... (Score:2)
Heat?
Rain?(this year)
Tank tops/short shorts? (Women in
White shoes?(for those sartorially challenged)
Heat? (It deserves at least one other mention with Global Warming)
Mosqitos/West Nile?(Something has to fill our post-SARS days with dread)
Aw, c'mon. (Score:5, Funny)
There's no such thing as too geeky. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go polish my Star Trek figurines, attend to my X-Wing model, review my anime collection, dust my wallscrolls, order an Alienware case, muse over Kerouac, check the Slashdot front page again, write a new Linux text editor, submit an Amazon review for the latest Babylon 5 novel, put a P4 motherboard in a Commodore case, make a particle accelerator out of coffee grounds and tin foil, and post to sci.math and alt.tv.x-files. And recompile my kernel.
Come to think of it (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Aw, c'mon. (Score:3, Funny)
What do you do (Score:1)
Anarchism in his work. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Anarchy is chaos
No. Anarchy is no rulers. Chaos is "a lack of order". Obviously out esteemed masters would like us to believe that the whole world would cease to exist without them but logically the lack of a heirarchically structure does not have too mean no structure at all.
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:5, Funny)
That high-pitched keening sound you hear is Ayn Rand twirling about in her interment...
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:5, Funny)
> That high-pitched keening sound you hear is Ayn Rand twirling about in her interment...
So? Wrap a few thousand turns of Rearden Wire around 'er, and hey, now we know how Galt's Gulch was really powered!
In the esoteric version of the novel (in which the Oath was a trap to trigger the generator's self-destruct mechanism by causing Rand to stop spinning), John Galt's biggest complaint about Gulch life was having to say "libertarian socialism" three times a day just to keep Ayn spun up fast enough to power the city.)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Anarchism? Is it anything like Somalia, or Chechnya?
No it is not like Somalia. Anarchy is no rulers ("No Gods, No Masters"). A load of warlords fighting over who gets to own the country sounds like rulers to me. One man robbing another at gun point or G. W. Bush, it is just a matter of scale, but the princple is the same. If you have hierarchical power relations based on force or the threat of force then it isn't anarchy. For future reference:
Anarchy: No rulers or hierarchical social structures bas
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Help me out here...
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Or not (Score:2)
Re:Or not (Score:2)
Could you please explain what place currency has in an anarchy driven society?
None. However Ken McLeod's books deal with many different political systems and mixtures thereof, not just anarchism. Things are also confused by the fact that there are many people today that call themselves anarchists, but are not. There are some people (mostly americans) who describe themselves as anarcho-capitalists, but the anarcho bit of it is at best an affectation and often just delusional. The state and capitalism ar
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:4, Interesting)
His novels are interesting from a Political standpoint (Eric Flint being the only other significant Trotskyist author in SF today, and Flint's much less political in his writings). Unfortunately, he can't write a believable female character to save his life.
But Ken MacLeod is a must read, just for writing a believable communist society that isn't hell or a utopia. This is certainly a rarity in todays world (Not that I'd want to live in his 4th International society, but that's personal taste, I wouldn't want to live in one of L. Neil Smith's Libertarian pipedreams either.)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
For evidence of this you need look no further than Ken MacLeod's own blog, http://kenmacleod.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com] - Down in the end of the June 17th entry he writes: "However, the expose did give me something to throw in the
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
I enjoyed *The Cassini Division* because at least it went to the end-game and spelled out the 'what if' implications. In the other novels I simply wasn't interested in listening to various associates of Dave Reid argue about politics, or conspire to bring about whatever counter-counter-counter-revolution the
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
I'm in total agreement with you here - although there were some lovely hard sci-fi concepts and ideas, all the political stuff completely ruined it for me. I don't think anyone has mentioned Alastair Reynolds yet. He's a stunning space opera writer, although I think that's a little restrictive. Start with R
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:2)
Re:Anarchism in his work. (Score:1)
I beg to differ.... (Score:5, Funny)
A two piece bikini says it much better than a paperback baby.
Eh? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Unless.... (Score:1)
But other than that, I'd have to agree with you.
Re:I beg to differ.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I beg to differ.... (Score:2)
Re:I beg to differ.... (Score:2)
Re:I beg to differ.... (Score:1)
Round here it's a one-piece bikini. Are you jealous ?
Screwed up seasons (Score:1)
And nothing says the middle of winter like burning some paperback science fiction for warmth.
The best part of this book... (Score:4, Interesting)
Brilliant!
Re:The best part of this book... (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyway, I only read about a quarter of it before I got bored.
Not a patch on the Hyperion cantos by Dan Simmons.
Skyshadow's Summer Reading Recommendations: (Score:5, Informative)
Jennifer Government by Max Barry.
Very near-future society where multinationals have been carried to their logical conclusion. Funny, interesting and thought provoking and highly reminiscent of Neal Stephenson's earlier work (in a good way).
A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge.
Entertaining story along with two extremely interesting concepts: the intragalactic usenet and well-executed small group-minded aliens. If you like it, A Deepness in the Sky by the same author is a definate next stop. Vinge reminds me a lot of Larry Niven, again in a good way.
Harry Potter
Just go ahead and buy it -- you know you want to. Don't let the disapproving looks from the book snob working the checkout counter at Borders deter you -- they're working at Borders, few chrissake, who are they to criticise? A little fluff reading never hurt anyone.
Smoke and Mirrors by Neil Gaiman
A lot of people are crazy about American Gods, and I agree it's a good read. However, Neil Gaiman's real strongpoint is his short stories, of which this is a collection. "Murder Mysteries", "Only the End of the World Again" and "Don't Ask Jack" are my personal favorites, although there's really good stuff throughout.
Re:Skyshadow's Summer Reading Recommendations: (Score:2)
A lot of people are crazy about American Gods, and I agree it's a good read. However, Neil Gaiman's real strongpoint is his short stories, of which this is a collection. "Murder Mysteries", "Only the End of the World Again" and "Don't Ask Jack" are my personal favorites, although there's really good stuff throughout."
Better yet, pick up some of his Sandman trade paperbacks. Now that's geeky!
Vernor Vinge is so dated... (Score:2)
Actually, I do agree he is a good read.
Re:Skyshadow's Summer Reading Recommendations: (Score:2)
Yeah, it's fairly nice. Compares favorably to Niven's stuff, imo. No bolt-on-sex-scene-per-book to start with.. The concept of everything getting more stupid the closer you get into galactic ce
Engines of Light (Score:2)
Not bad (Score:1)
Ender
Re:Not bad [OT] (Score:1)
It's just a random statement. There is a story behind it. I guess I will make a journal entry regarding it....
Previous works... (Score:4, Informative)
I think this reviewer is missing out; reading this book by itself is kinda like watching Return of the Jedi without have seen the two previous parts. MacLeod's first work, The Star Fraction, is a good prequel (now available in the US), but to really grasp the setup for The Cassini Division, it is very helpful to read The Stone Canal first. (The Sky Road is a sequel to The Stone Canal as well, but the world described is mutually exlusive with The Cassini Division)
Personally, I've enjoyed all of MacLeod's works (including the trilogy in progess that starts with Cosmonaut Keep). Part of that is the well paced/structured stories, the intriguing look at tech and/or politics, and especially the low-key humor that he works in. In The Cassini Division, the story is peopled with ber-socialists; guess what the euphemism, "Go employ yourself!" refers to...
Re:Previous works... (Score:1)
Re:Previous works... (Score:1)
In the "introduction to the American Edition" for The Star Fraction, MacLeod states, "The four books can be read in any order, and the last two of them present alternative possible futures emerging from that mid twenty-first-century world I imagined at the beginning." In The Sky Road, terrestrial space travel had stopped for over a century after the "revolution", while it had continued for that time in The Cassini Division. Remember that
MacLeod's Weblog (Score:5, Informative)
http://kenmacleod.blogspot.com/
Good sci fi (Score:4, Interesting)
It seems a lot easier to avoid "sci-fear" in text form though
Re:Good sci fi (Score:5, Insightful)
If Reloaded had any deeper meaning at all, I think it was that humans and technology need each other, not that tech is bad. If you want a real "tech is no good" attitude, Fight Club might be a better example...
"In the world I see -- you're stalking elk through the damp canyon forests around the ruins of Rockefeller Center. You will wear leather clothes that last you the rest of your life. You will climb the wrist- thick kudzu vines that wrap the Sears Tower. You will see tiny figures pounding corn and laying-strips of venison on the empty car pool lane of the ruins of a superhighway."
Fight Club (Score:2)
At the end of the movie, Jack says to Tyler, "My eyes are open." Ie. He knows what was wrong with himself, but Tyler was going to far.
Anyway, that's my take on it.
Re:Fight Club (Score:2)
No, I agree. I suppose I was pointing to Tyler's attitude as a good example of the attitude the original poster was accusing the Matrix series of taking.
For what it's worth, I also don't think that Fight Club was just about consumerism (although the term "Ikea nesting instinct" struck me close to home). I look at the book as two sections, one f
Re:Fight Club (Score:2)
I thought Fight Club raised some excellent points regarding rampant consumerism, as I have seen my share of people who's posessions are actually making them less happy, ie. owning them.
Anyway, my compile is finished, back to work... in my 8x8' cubicle :)
cubicle envy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fight Club (Score:2)
Re:Good sci fi (Score:2)
So how about it? Would you buy science fiction films if they could be made as good as literary SF?
Re:Good sci fi (Score:1)
Can I plug Ian M. Banks' Culture series again for adaptation??
The Killing Star (Score:1, Interesting)
The best, scariest "hard science" fiction I've read.
It starts with earth and the human race getting wiped out. Then trouble really begins. Plus a whole new reason to hate Michael Jackson.
Learn it, Love it, Live it.
Beer, it's not just for breakfast anymore.
Re:The Killing Star (Score:1)
Both MacLeod's oeuvre (word for the day) and The Killing Star were easily found in my local library's online catalog -- guess where I'm headed after logging off Slashdot?
Tyler
Anything will get posted on Slashdot these days (Score:1, Troll)
I can understand if the author thought that this book was an excellent overlooked novel that all Slashdot readers should pick up. But really - what's the motivation behind this story and why on earth did the Slashdot editors be
Re:Matrix review (Score:2)
Re:Matrix review (Score:2)
We're all coppertops.
Sorry if I ruined it for you.
Oh and I suggest you don't watch the film at all. It'll make you all excited about the sequel and that's just going to piss you off. I also suggest not watching Star Wars.
Re:Matrix review (Score:1)
Grimwood (Score:2)
Anyway, I read Gibson, Banks, Stephenson, Sterling etc.... and have just discovered Grimwood's Arabesk series and am nearly through the first one. WOW is all I can say. The review on the back of the book "Science fiction
Re:Grimwood (Score:2)
Re:Grimwood (Score:1)
you really meant appalling didn't you?
Appalling: To fill with consternation or dismay [Middle English apallen, to grow faint, from Old French apalir : a-, to (from Latin ad-. See ad-) + palir, to grow pale (from pale, pale, from Latin pallidus, from pallre, to grow pale. See pel-1 in Indo-European Roots).]
Gibson's grammar (Score:3, Informative)
Hmm, I suspect as far as the grammar and concord errors go, you're talking about Gibson's writing style, which is deliberate - the kind of thing you can learn if you study creative writing at university and you get very, very good at it.
There are quite a few literarily-admired non-SF authors who write in some variation on this style. One that comes to mind is E.L. Doctor
Re:Gibson's grammar (Score:1)
Re:Gibson's grammar (Score:1)
Inane (Score:1)
Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan (Score:1)
Highly recommended!
(Added The Cassini Division to the list to check out)
More MacLeod reviews (Score:1)
I've review everything MacLeod has written:
http://sfbook.com/modules.php?authorid=30 [sfbook.com]
[All done...]
Cassini Oval? (Score:1)
That's odd... (Score:2)
Is this still Slashdot?
Political SF: another suggestion (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Political SF: another suggestion (Score:2)
his writing is beautiful, where MacLeod's is merely functional.
regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith regolith ???
Good Book -- Led me to read other's of his (Score:3, Insightful)
My take on him is that he writes a lot of words and progresses slowly with great detail. It reminds me a lot of David Brin's novel-length writings in this regard.
Conclusion: He is worth bringing to the attention of /. readers who haven't already heard of him, and The Cassini Division is definitely one of his best so far.
Reality Dysfunction: Space opera at its best... (Score:3, Informative)
However, do not be dismayed- it may be a huge read, but it is worth it. Hamilton's universe is vast and very detailed; a million subplots that aren't just filler.
It takes place in the 27th century; humanity is basically divided into two camps- Adamists and Edenists. Adamists are what most folks would think of as the natural progression of today's society; and Edenists are a group of commies that have a form of genetically-engineered telepathy (called "affinity") and rely on organic technology. Humanity really only knows of two other sentient species other than themselves. It sounded cheesy to me at first, but it is an amazing series. I only finished it 6 months ago, and I'm having to stop myself from reading it again...
Re:Reality Dysfunction: Space opera at its best... (Score:2)
Make no mistakes, the book has some of the coolest augmented reality and artificial beings that I have ever seen. But it has a major flaw. After spending 4000 pages describing how worthless religions are, the author, having painted himself into a corner, now has to use the oldest, dirtiest tricks of all suspense books:...
a deus ex machina.
in other words, Hamilton throws a genuine miracle in order to save a helpless situation, a tric
Re:Reality Dysfunction: Space opera at its best... (Score:2)
Cheap writer tricks (Score:2)
This and the weak ending explained my disappointment. You get interested in a character and then you realize that he dies or is obliterated without any impact on the main line story - that's called a cheap filler. Editors used to cut them
Re:Cheap writer tricks (Score:2)
Recommended authors (Score:2)
Welcome to the world of SF then! If you are new, you cannot avoid reading the Great Classics:
This Just In - Ken MacLeod - dead (Score:2)
Ken MacLeod, famous fiction writer, was found dead at in his home this morning.
He had been decapitated whilst sitting at his computer, working on his latest sci-fi novel.
Witnesses state seeing unusual electrical activity in the vicinity of his home the morning of the incident.
Police are currently looking for a "long-haired, sword-wielding hottie" in a trenchcoat.
Re:This Just In - Ken MacLeod - dead (Score:1)
Er, sorry. Wrong MacLeod.
Coincidentally, I happen to belong to the MacLeod clan, but I seem to have lost my sword somewhere...
I read this book just last year, but... (Score:2)
Sorry . No much out there worth buying these days.
Oh, it's a book review... (Score:1)
The Cassini Division (Score:1)
I enjoyed a lot reading it. One of the things I lov in Asimov's stories is the idea he had about what the robots would be in the future.
One of the few books I got a refund on. (Score:2)
It was a combination of his dedication and the first two chapters that convinced me it would be better to buy a cup of coffee with the money.
The coffee was very good.
What??!?? (Score:1)
hehe thats a pretty nerdy thing to say. I did read the book though about 2 years ago so I must be a bit of a nerd. Anywho, in a word the book sucked a big one. Basically it comes down to the idealistic inhabitants of the earth and solar system, who sustain their society with friendly dedicated volunteers, are fighting some bullshit menace; then they are warped over to the "american" (capitalists) world where every one has computer gear s
Re:In case of slashdotting (Score:2)
At the beginning of the 24th century... oh fuck it, nevermind.