I've just finished Marseguro, the first book in The Helix War by Edward
Willett. This book, along with the second Terra Insegura, have been
released more recently in an omnibus edition by DAW called The Helix
War, so if you're looking for it, look for the omnibus edition.
The main premise is that, fifty years ago, Earth was threatened with
destruction by a massive meteor. This caused a radical shift in
religions, and when the meteorite is hit by another meteor shortly
before impact with Earth, a new religion called the Body Purified rises
to power, claiming that because of their efforts to "purify" the Earth
of all of the genetically modified life we've created--including
genetically modified humans--God Itself saved them. During the religious
wars, with the Body Purified slaughtering everyone genetically modified
they could find, Victor Hansen, a geneticist, packed himself and his
modified humans called Selkies into a ship and vanished.
He landed on a planet the Selkies and non-modified humans in his ship
call Marseguro. They've lived there for fifty years, undetected by the
Body Purified, who have solidified their power on Earth . . . but have
not stopped looking for Victor Hansen. In fact, they've created clones
of Victor in an attempt to figure out where he went with his monstrous
Selkie creations. The current clone, Richard, and the gene-bomb placed
in his DNA that will give him Victor Hansen's memories, is searching for
them and has narrowed the field down to a particular section of space.
It might take decades to find what planet Victor Hansen and the Selkies
fled to . . . except that a few of the non-modified members of Victor's
crew believed in the Body Purified, and one of them, Chris Keating, has
been pushed far enough by the Selkies that he activates a distress call
from Victor's original ship, leading the Body Purified directly to them.
The rest of the novel deals with the fallout of that setup. Can those on
Marseguro protect themselves from the Body Purified's attempt to
"purify" their planet of all genetically modified humans? They've only
had fifty years to survive and attempt to settle the world, so have
almost no weapons, but the Selkies can breath underwater and they
certainly haven't been idle. Yet they have no idea that the Body
Purified is on the way.
I don't read a lot of science fiction, but I liked the setup of
Marseguro and, more importantly, liked the characters in the book. Most
SF that I've read has a tendency to NOT have characterization, at least
not at the same level as the fantasy novels I generally read, so I was
pleasantly surprised in that respect. In this novel, a bunch of
questions are raised about the ethics of genetic modification, whether
what we create can still be considered human, etc, but I don't think the
author beat us over the head with moralistic dilemmas. The book comes
down pretty solidly on the side of the genetically modified humans as
being . . . well, human, just like everyone else. The story focuses
instead on the main characters and their struggles, to survive and to
deal with unreasoning hatred.Richard has to deal with who he is--is he
Richard, or is he just Victor Hansen?--while Emily Wood, a Selkie, is
forced to grow up rather fast when the Body Purified arrives. Emily's
mother, a geneticist, must face the consequences of the genetic
battle--is it good or evil?--when she uses her skills in Marseguro's
defense.
So, I thought the story, the setting, and the characters were all
interesting. They certainly kept me reading. I've already started the
second book, Terra Insegura. There were a few less believable factors in
setting up the premise--such as a second meteor showing up in the nick
of time to save humanity, plus a few other things--but none of those had
major impacts on the plot and could be easily overlooked (at least by
me). The story and characters themselves were solid and entertaining.
A word of caution though: This is NOT what I'd consider a military SF
novel. It's science fiction, but there is little actual "battle" in the
military SF sense and it's not hard SF either. Keep that in mind if you
pick this up.
Joshua Palmatier/Benjamin Tate