Book #30: The Children of the Sky by Vernor Vinge
Thoughts:
It's difficult to know what to write about this one without posting massive spoilers for its predecessor, A Fire Upon the Deep. I think, first and foremost, this is a sequel to a book that didn't need a sequel. It's taken Vernor Vinge 19 years since the publication of AFUtD to come up with this book and, on some levels, it seems even given all that time even he didn't quite know what to do with it.
Moving the tale on ten years after the events of the previous book, The Children of the Sky is a planet-bound story that eschews all the galaxy-spanning awe, the space opera, the Net of a Million Lies, and more, and concentrates on a power struggle on Tines World. It's kind of like Star Wars: The Phantom Menace - you've seen the previous films and are hoping to experience that sense of wonder and excitement all over again but, instead, you get a trade dispute Okay, CotS is nowhere near as bad as Phantom Menace. In fact, it is very entertaining in its own way. The main problem is that it wasn't needed and, as much fun as it is to revisit some of these wonderful characters, it's just not the same without the excitement, tensions and drama inherent in the plot of the previous book. And, what's worse, it leaves even more questions unanswered for what seems likely to be yet another sequel. Ka-ching!
Still, there is fun to be had. The characters, old and new, create much warmth and humour and it is good to find out what happened to them. Hopefully the next book, whenever it may arrive, will get back to what Vinge did so well before. I'm still looking forward to reading the prequel, A Deepness in the Sky, though - apparently it's a belter
6/10