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The Long Sunset

por Jack McDevitt

Outros autores: Ver a secção outros autores.

Séries: The Academy: Priscilla Hutchins (7)

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1567174,822 (3.74)6
"Hutch has been the Academy's best pilot for decades. She's had numerous first contact encounters and even became a minor celebrity. But world politics have shifted from exploration to a growing fear that the program will run into an extraterrestrial race more advanced than humanity and war. Despite taking part in the recent scientific breakthrough that rejuvenates the human body and expands one's lifespan, Hutch finds herself as a famous interstellar pilot with little to do, until a message from an alien race arrives. The message is a piece of music from an unexplored area. Despite the fact that this alien race could pose a great danger and that this message could have taken several thousand years to travel, the program prepares the last interstellar ship for the journey. As the paranoia grows, Hutch and her crew make an early escape--but what they find at the other end of the galaxy is completely unexpected"--… (mais)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 7 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
Oh, good grief. A team of 'explorers' from a sadly stunted future Earth travel thousands of light YEARS (complaining the whole MONTH they have to spend in the spaceship to get there) to investigate an alien transmission. They find several species of aliens, on several worlds, but seem barely capable of being curious and professional enough about discovering aliens. That's ok, though, because they crash land on a doomed world with aliens who are basically humans that look like dolphins. The aliens live in a society with technology and customs very much like those of the USA in the 70s or 80s. All the other aliens also seem to have oddly American, human-like technology, and the human explorers seem not at all bothered by the lack of alienness of the aliens. McDevitt's other books are generally much better than this. Maybe he had a looming deadline and was feeling ill when he sent this one to his publisher? ( )
  JBarringer | Dec 15, 2023 |
Thought provoking...

A grand space adventure with a bit of love your neighbors. The writing was suspenseful and kept the story moving along. Lots of moral dilemmas and Hutch being Hutch. ( )
  davisfamily | Dec 11, 2022 |
This was a really nice book to listen to. I loved where the story went. Much better all around than the previous. ( )
  Luziadovalongo | Jul 14, 2022 |
The Academy has been shuttered and Priscilla Hutchins (Hutch) is adjusting to life on Earth. Humanity has become fearful of continued space exploration—there's a growing paranoia that someday such expeditions will bring back something too dangerous. The President herself is campaigning for reelection on a platform of ending the space program.

When an astronomer discovers a signal from deep space which clearly indicates the presence of an intelligent, technologically sophisticated alien civilization, he recruits a team to seek out these aliens and Hutch is put in command. But people don't want them to go and the team must race to take off before the government can shut them down.

(Spoiler: They manage to take off anyway.)

Once underway, they discover new planets with signs of civilizations long since dead. They also discover what killed them: a rogue black hole barrelling through space. The black hole is on track to destroy another planet, this one with an intelligent alien civilization on the cusp of developing advanced technology. Now they have to make contact with these aliens and find a way to save them.

The Long Sunset has all the delights of galaxy-spanning discovery, elements of a gripping race-against-the-clock thriller, and a compelling Big Idea about what alien life might be like. It's a potent mix of ingredients.

And they're all wasted. This is one of the most indifferent novels I read this year.

At the core of this novel, McDevitt offers an idea about alien intelligence and civilization which is genuinely fascinating: he believes that aliens will be just like us—technologically, culturally, in their values and customs, with houses, cars, schools, beach vacations, well-tempered music, religion, etc. Moreover, their history will follow the same trajectory ours did. If you encounter an alien race farther behind on the technological development timeline, their culture will be like stepping back in time to an earlier iteration of human culture.

McDevitt posits salient points to support this idea: the laws of physics are universal and spacefaring requires the development of certain technologies which in turn require iterative progress. There's some merit to his premise and he argues it well.

One can't help notice a couple of problems, though:

His vision of the universally required technological culture is exclusively Western (almost exclusively American, almost exclusively aspirational middle class) and completely fails to acknowledge the vast cultural diversity of our own planet and species. One wonders how historians, anthropologists, sociologists, and the like would react to the reductive implication that all culture is a product of technological development. It's also facile to assume there isn't more than one possible path to technological advancement, even within the strictures of universal physical laws.

But when we put those criticisms aside and accept his premise for the sake of the story, it remains problematic.

The thought that aliens would be just like us is intellectually fascinating but it's a boring dramatic choice. We can ponder it with some philosophical pleasure but as a storytelling mechanism it's bland. There are two first contact scenarios in this book and both of them go nicely. It's all pleasant. Everyone is agreeable and polite and gets along. The problems are mechanical, impersonal. There's no conflict in these encounters.

It could still be a good story—interesting people interacting under interesting circumstances. But it’s clear McDevitt doesn't know how to tell this kind of character focused story. It comes across stilted and overly formal. The dialog is mostly characters talking about the situation, so there's less substantive character development than one would hope for. There's nothing personal about any of it.

I enjoy aliens in science fiction primarily for their role as foils and contrasts to humanity. In attempting to envision beings different from us, we reflect on who and what we are in unique ways. By creating aliens who are just like us (indeed, far nicer versions of us) this contrasting, reflective power is lost.

There's a reason McDevitt chose to address first contact this way: the very beginning of the novel establishes that most people on Earth have grown fearful of encountering hostile aliens more powerful than us. The peaceful, non-confrontational first contacts which occur are an answer to this paranoia: "See? There's nothing to worry about."

Structurally, this makes sense. Intellectually, it makes sense. Dramatically, it's weak.

There are two main sources of tension and conflict in this book:

1) The impending cosmological cataclysm, as the black hole bears down on the alien world and the race to bring help in time to evacuate them.

2) Earthly politics at first threatening to stop the expedition entirely, later threatening to scuttle the alien rescue attempt.

The black hole is a passive conflict, unavoidable, inviolate to the actions of the characters. The only impediment to the rush to evacuate the alien planet is Earthly political obstructionism.

Which means Earthly politics is the only source of substantial active conflict in the novel. In which case, McDevitt needs to delve deeply into this political conflict, to mine it for everything he can.

He barely touches it. The political situation on Earth is frequently discussed but there are very few scenes in which political conflict drives the interaction of the characters. There are a couple of scenes in which political conflict is the primary motive force—notably, at the beginning when the expedition launches, and near the end when Hutch meets with the President. But these scenes are mostly short and shallow, and only at the beginning and end of the novel.

It's clear that McDevitt doesn't know how to write good political scenes and wasn't comfortable with them. He doesn't seem to know how to handle this kind of storytelling and gets it over with as quickly as he can. His timorous attempts at it are awkward and unconvincing.

The end result is there's hardly any compelling conflict for most of the novel.

So we end up with a story featuring the exploration of strange planets, a world ending apocalypse, multiple first contacts with intelligent alien civilizations, a race against the clock, deep political conflicts…

And it's dramatically inert and timid.

This is definitely not McDevitt's best work. ( )
1 vote johnthelibrarian | Aug 11, 2020 |
While I can never say that these books by McDevitt are super original, he does have a talent at writing them very well. And I don't mean that they're just some super-action fluff, either, because he just doesn't write those kinds of novels.

Instead, we have a thoughtful pacing, in-depth consideration of circumstances, a deep love of curiosity and archeology, and a need to bring up issues that are just as important to us as they are for the characters in this future time.

Interstellar travel is here and it has been here for quite some time since book #6, but AGAIN Earth is hell-bent on saving resources and shutting down the programs that keep our eyes fixed on the stars. Isolationism. Again. But after a transmission from 7 thousand years ago finally reaches us, depicting intelligent aliens with music tastes that we can get behind, Hutch is asked to take a trip.

Unlike another few of these Academy novels, I actually liked the aliens. The mystery is rather more mundane and the discoveries are a lot more pleasant as a whole and I don't miss the multiple deaths that usually happened in these novels.

I really enjoyed the rescue mission as a whole. I fully expect to keep reading all about this story in the future. Big things are only beginning. :) Friendship in the stars? It's about time. :) The OTHER argument. No Dark Forest here. :) ( )
  bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |
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Nome do autorPapelTipo de autorObra?Estado
Jack McDevittautor principaltodas as ediçõescalculado
Bresnahan, AlyssaNarradorautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
Harris, JohnArtista da capaautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado

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"Hutch has been the Academy's best pilot for decades. She's had numerous first contact encounters and even became a minor celebrity. But world politics have shifted from exploration to a growing fear that the program will run into an extraterrestrial race more advanced than humanity and war. Despite taking part in the recent scientific breakthrough that rejuvenates the human body and expands one's lifespan, Hutch finds herself as a famous interstellar pilot with little to do, until a message from an alien race arrives. The message is a piece of music from an unexplored area. Despite the fact that this alien race could pose a great danger and that this message could have taken several thousand years to travel, the program prepares the last interstellar ship for the journey. As the paranoia grows, Hutch and her crew make an early escape--but what they find at the other end of the galaxy is completely unexpected"--

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