![]() ![]() During the reading, it was a strange mixture of mendicant scholastics, financial mechanics, dancing skeletons, mermaids, and deep, deepwater squids harvesting rich uranium salts from an ocean world. In reflection, I'm likely to giggle about this one. Not only were the ideas interesting, but the tale was very humorous at a distance. It was certainly amusing we're referred to as "The Fragile" because we break so damn easily. Make no mistake, it's a heist novel, but it happens to be populated by post-humanity robots in an interstellar empire with insurance agents who are pirates, where faster-than-light promises are the best confidence scams, and extinct humanity is gestated in church-owned vats and revered before they're sent to die upon colony worlds as the nominal passed-on wish of humanity's deep past. Like I said, it's not for everyone, but it is for the type of person who loves a good heist novel with huge-scale grifters and con-men. In fact, I've been enjoying a lot of financial chicanery novels over the last decade and a half. Stross blew my mind with Accelerando, but the merchant novels were quite good as well, and one should never forget Rule 34. It's not for everyone, but I personally love financial sci-fi stories. ![]()
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