Salvation lost

Peter F. Hamilton

Book - 2019

The comparative utopia of twenty-third century Earth is about to go dreadfully awry when a seemingly benign alien race is abruptly revealed to be one of the worst threats humanity has ever faced. Driven by an intense religious extremism, the Olyix are determined to bring everyone to their version of god as they see it. But they may have met their match in humanity, who are not about to go gently into that good night or spend the rest of their days cowering in hiding. As human ingenuity and determination rises to the challenge, collective humanity has only one goal--to wipe this apparently undefeatable enemy from the face of creation. Even if it means playing a ridiculously long game indeed.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
New York : Del Rey, an imprint of Random House [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Peter F. Hamilton (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
493 pages; 25 cm
ISBN
9780399178856
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The second book in The Salvation Sequence (after Salvation, 2018) opens with mysterious but not unexpected aliens arriving on a planet. This installment continues the tale of the 23rd-Century Assessment Team in a future when long distance (even intergalactic) travel is as simple as walking through a doorway. Meanwhile, ten thousand years in their future, the Strike Team continues the war against the Olyix and recruits the Neána to join forces with humanity. The pieces begin to connect between the two time periods as the Olyix arcship The Salvation of Life is revealed to be less an embassy of peace than a beachhead for an intergalactic assault. In addition to the Assessment and Strike teams, this epic galaxy-spanning conflict includes a London street gang, an executive near the top of the corporate ladder, and a mysterious observer whose consciousness grows as a plan developing over the millennia comes to fruition. Told in a quick-reading style with humor, a depth of character, and a cunning plot, Salvation Lost nicely sets up the conflict for the series finale.--Terrence Miltner Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The middle volume of Hamilton's Salvation Sequence space opera trilogy (after 2018's Salvation) provides a clever variation on the theme of alien invasion, but it's stronger on worldbuilding than characterizations. Hamilton's early-23rd-century Earth features intriguing developments: 3-D printers produce much of the food supply, and kilowatt-hours back major national currencies. Against that backdrop, and with 100 million humans living in colonies on asteroids and other planets, humankind must confront an existential challenge from an alien race, the Olyix. The Olyix have given humans biotech in exchange for electrical energy, which the aliens need to power their ships on a journey to "the end of the universe." But their true intentions are revealed by another nonhuman race, the Neána, one of whom, Jessika, discloses that the Olyix are bent on offering human souls to their deity, whom they expect to find at their journey's conclusion. The humans' suspenseful resistance against overwhelming odds sets the stage for the series' conclusion, and Hamilton keeps things grounded with all-too-credible passages about partisan political bickering in the face of disaster. Series fans will enjoy this installment. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Second part of Hamilton's alien-invasion space opera trilogy (Salvation, 2018).Of the three main plot threads here, two are set early in the 23rd century. Thanks to the shattering discovery made at the end of Book 1, humanity now knows that the seemingly benevolent Olyix actually plan to turn humans into pods and carry them away to meet the Olyix god at the end of the universe. With their subterfuge now revealed, the Olyix launch a full-scale invasion. Various members of the fabulously wealthy Zangari family, which controls the instantaneous-transfer wormhole portal network, plan Earth's defense along with the Utopial agent Callum Hepburn and others. A second alien race, the Nena, arrived stealthily some years ago and grew human bodies; one such, Jessika, now advises humanity to run and hide. But, disconcerted by the Olyix treachery, the humans don't really trust her despite her revelations and outright reject the run-and-hide strategy in favor of direct action. The second thread involves a gang of thugs led by Tronde, who've been hired to sabotage Zangari facilities; they don't care why. Ten thousand years in the future, meanwhile, the soldier trainees we met in the first book set a trap for an Olyix vessel, intending to learn the whereabouts of the alien homeworld; they're being secretly observed by a mysterious and powerful entity and may be disastrously overconfident. The thugs are problematic, being mostly an incorrigible bunch whose self-centered doings serve little purpose other than to pad out the proceedings. For the remainder, though, the pacing is swift, with spectacular action, thoughtful strategies, eye-popping ideas, and Hamilton's usual attention to detail, all woven into a taut, gripping narrative.Not quite yet top drawer but a vast improvement on its circuitous, dawdling predecessor. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Vayan Calling The dark, cold bulk of the Neána insertion ship had been traveling through interstellar space for twenty-two years before it flew across the faint twinkling specks of the star's cometary belt. Half a light-year ahead, their G9 target star shone with a strong silver-white glare, casting its intense rays over a family of twelve planets. The fourth planet, a small, solid world, was emitting a bright babble of radio signals--a source that a Neána abode cluster had picked up when the Vayans began their tentative first broadcasts fifty-three years earlier. A trio of moons orbited the warm, life-rich fourth planet in eccentric million-kilometer loops above its white clouds, lush continents, and deep blue oceans. Two of them were now also emitting electromagnetic signals; the radio waves were coming from the pioneering research bases that the native Vayans had recently constructed. Forty-seven different Vayan clans were operating space programs, putting aside their conflict-heavy history to collaborate on the great adventure out across the gulf of space. The insertion ship flew in north of the solar ecliptic, shedding cold mass in irregular bursts like a black comet--a deceleration maneuver that took nineteen months. This was always the riskiest part of the voyage. The Vayans currently had thirty-two robot space probes traversing their solar system, sending back a great deal of crude science sensor data to their homeworld, as well as two high-powered observatories on the largest moon. The chance of one spotting the insertion ship was slim, but the controlling sentience took no chances. By the time it passed the innermost gas giant, it was down to twenty-five meters in diameter. It had no magnetic field, and the outer shell was fully radiation-absorbent in every spectrum, making it invisible to any telescopes. As it closed on Vayan, it detected a spaceship departing one of the three stations in low orbit, a nuclear fission rocket sending it on a ten-month flight to the fifth planet. A crew of eleven Vayans was crammed into its small life-support cabin--emissaries of their species' exuberant spirit, boldly outbound on their first interplanetary flight. Given that the Vayans had only launched their first chemical propellant rocket into orbit seventeen years earlier, the insertion ship's controlling sentience was impressed by the speed of their technological progress. During its long, lonely voyage between the stars, it had monitored the plethora of signals broadcast from Vayan, building up an extensive knowledge base of the species' history and culture. Socially, they were organized along clan lines: a protective imperative bestowed by their distinct reproductive biology. Each female had up to ten mates, who all fertilized her egg cluster over the course of her fifteen-year adult life stage. When she was ready to gestate, she became immobile, feeding on the predigested pulp provided by her mates as her wombs began to swell. Giving birth to up to fifty infant Vayans was her last living act--though the insertion ship had recently picked up broadcasts speculating that modern medical techniques might be able to prolong female life after birth. From what the controlling sentience could understand, the concept was regarded as far-fetched and almost heretical. Though, so far, the Vayans seemed to have avoided the whole concept of deities and religion. Physically, the Vayans had four legs supporting a rounded double-section body with eight upper arm-limbs. There was a long prehensile neck on the top, lifting up an ovoid cranium containing eight eyes and a combination ear-echo sonar organ, providing all-around perception. Their particular sensorium neurology meant they'd evolved past the concept of front and back and now had the capacity for free-ranging motion. That specific analytic ability gave the controlling sentience some difficulty when it came to developing equivalent thought routines for the six Vayan body biologics that it was now growing in its onboard molecular initiators. Fortunately, Vayan biochemistry was relatively easy to replicate. As it closed to within a million kilometers of Vayan, the insertion ship discarded the last of its reaction mass as it performed a final deceleration maneuver. Now it was basically just falling toward the southernmost tip of the Farava continent. The lights of nighttime urban citadels sparkled across the continent, linked by the slender blue-green threads of bioluminescent transport rails. Tiny course correction ejecta refined the ship's descent vector, steering it toward the coast, which was still thirty minutes from greeting the dawn. Even if some Vayan telescope chanced to find the ship now, it would simply appear to be a small chunk of natural space debris. It hit the upper atmosphere and began to peel apart into six pear-shaped segments. The remaining matter broke away in fizzing sparks that produced a short-lived but beautiful starburst display streaking through the mesosphere. Below it, sheltered under their blanket of thick winter cloud, the clan packs of Gomarbab--the southernmost urban citadel on Vayan--remained oblivious to their interstellar visitor. Each segment continued down, aerobraking with increasing severity as the atmosphere thickened around them. They slowed to subsonic velocity three kilometers above the surface, plunging through the clouds. The segments were aimed at a small cove a few kilometers east of the urban citadel, where the gently undulating frost meadows ended in high cliffs atop pebble beaches. A hundred meters from the shore, six large splash plumes shot up into the air like thick geysers, crowning and splattering down on the slushy ice that bobbed about in the subzero saltwater. The Neána metavayans floated to the surface. All that now remained of the insertion ship's landing segments were thick layers of active molecule blocks, which covered their mottled blue-green hide like a blanket of translucent gel, insulating them from the cold. They began to swim ashore--an action that the native Vayans avoided as much as possible. The beach was a narrow strip of sharp granite rocks, with brown bracken fronds shooting up from the wider cracks. A tall cliff loomed above it, with a narrow V-shaped gorge that offered a slippery pathway up to the frost meadows. The metavayans scrambled a short way up the incline as the pale dawn light began to seep through the murky clouds. Their last protective layer liquidized, draining down into the stones, where it would be flushed away by the next high tide. "We made it," one emitted in a stream of fast whistles: the local clan dialect. "I was concerned about the landing impact," said another, the female of the group. "Fortunately, I am undamaged. These bodies are sturdy." "My skin is puckering," a third said. "This locale's temperature is below optimum." The first one reached into a bag that had been strapped to his upper body and pulled out clothing modeled on commercial imagery that the Vayans had broadcast six months earlier. "I believe we should cover ourselves as quickly as--" He stopped in alarm. A creature emerged from behind a large boulder at the base of the cliff. In all the years the insertion ship had monitored broadcasts from Vayan, no mention had been made of anything like it on the planet. The alien had a bipedal symmetry, with double-segment legs emerging from the base of a flat torso section. A pair of arms with limited articulation protruded from the top on either side of a squat neck that supported a bulbous head covered in tight, thin-looking ebony skin. Twin eyes gazed down at the metavayans. The creature was more than twice their height and walked toward them in an alarming motion that was mostly lurches. It was clad in a thick green garment. An arm was extended, with the five small manipulator digits at the end curling around a metallic cylinder. An orifice on the creature's head opened, and it produced a low, slow, hooting noise. The cylinder began to talk in Vayan. "Pleased don't be alarmed," it said. "We have been monitoring your flight for several months. We didn't try to contact the insertion ship directly, for fear it would self-destruct. We know how determined you are to protect your abode clusters." "What are you?" the first metavayan asked. "Do you share this world with the Vayan?" The creature's head twisted from side to side, and it began its ponderous hooting again. "My species is human, and my name is Yirella," the translator told them. "I'm afraid there's no such species as the Vayan. We invented them and their entire civilization in order to lure the Olyix here. We never expected a Neána ship to arrive as well. However, I welcome you to this star system, and invite you to join us in the fight against our common enemy." Excerpted from Salvation Lost by Peter F. Hamilton All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.