Grounded ships, gutted and transformed into warehouses and eateries. Sprawling streets stuffed with open-air shopfronts, overflowing with clothes and kitsch and sundries. Even if you didn’t need to stock up, the spectacle of it was well worth the trip. GC space had plenty of neutral markets that welcomed spacers of all species, but the Port was something special. It’s ambiguous, talks about BOTH sides of the equation, and is the sort of political question that the story touches upon again, and again, often eschewing a neat, clean answer in favor of highlighting the merit in each of the arguments. I can go on and on about more things I liked-the ending, for instance. Don’t you love that? I mean isn’t this “ordinariness” how we generally deal with the crap of our lives? It’s so good to see this channelled into an actual story. Conflict three is about each of the members doing the best they can in that moment. Conflict two is handled by figuring out a loophole in the law. Conflict One becomes steerable because of one of the crew members’ ability to communicate in a different language. Heck, even the conflicts that the crew runs into are dealt with in a pretty ordinary fashion. There is no guns-blazing, seize the evil villain by his horn action in this story. I would RATHER cultivate a kinder world-view than its opposite, and stories like The Long Way to a Small Angry definitely do their bit in forwarding that. Yes, even the resident curmudgeon has a sort of reason to be curmudgeony-not that that EXCUSES his behavior, but you know what? The reason does make me look at him with more understanding! And I LIKE this. Highlight, if you want to read! So, Rosemary and Sissix!! I really thought for quite a while that it’s going to be Ashby and Rosemary, since, well, they are both humans-yes! Bias much?! But turns out Chambers had BETTER things in mind! Their coming together romantically, while being of different species, with different cultural cues, and rules, and definitions about love and sex and family is just such a pleasure to watch unfold! And this is spoilery, so I’m putting it in white. Which brings me to a favorite story line. All this to say that the world-building is absolutely fantastic! I mean really, some of the species she describes are TRULY bizarre, and yet, it’s weird only when you look at it from a human perspective it’s weird because it’s different from what I’m used to! I really love this visceral sense that started stealing over me, of being ok with all these STRANGE looking creatures who despite, what I think of as, their peculiar-appearance are SAPIENT! This is a Universe populated by variety-where one species beauty is another species ugly, where one kind’s highest joy is another’s absolute and utter squirmy mortification. Funnily enough, reading this story I’ve somehow ended up expanding my zone of comfort about unexpected appearances. I’ve got to say that I really enjoyed Chambers’ imagining of each of the species, and their particular quirks. The structure is episodic with each chapter focusing on a specific crew member. Rosemary has never been out in the vast openness before and this nicely sets things up for the reader, alongside Rosemary, to get to know about the space that this story is set in, the history of this space, and the species that populate this space. The story starts with the induction of a new crew member, a human, into the Wayfarer’s crew. The captain and the crew have, what I guess must be, one of the most boring jobs in the galaxy. It doesn’t really have any main protagonists but instead is about a whole ensemble of characters, namely the crew of the ship Wayfarer. The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet is what I call a quiet story for all that it’s set in space and is a science-fiction. While big conflicts are quite possible at some point of our lives or the other, isn’t it the day to day, moment-to-moment choices that really make up the bulk of our lives? The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet is the kind of book that I want to read more of.
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