Translation State, by Ann Leckie (Orbit)
Ann Leckie is a jewel of modern science fiction. Her
worldbuilding and characters are consistently original, nuanced, deeply
resonant, and well thought-out. To describe the plot and premises of Translation State is to ignore her
masterful layering of themes and her ability to create truly relatable alien
characters.
This story centers on three characters: Enae, a reluctant diplomat tasked with
hunting down a fugitive who has been missing for over 200 years; Reet, an
adopted mechanic who is desperate to learn about his genetic roots to explain
why he operates so differently from those around him. And Qven, created to be a
Presger translator, an intermediary between the dangerous—as in
world-destroying—Presger and human civilization. The Presger are truly alien,
and it’s only through a centuries-old Treaty and the translators that they
haven’t inadvertently destroyed entire systems of inhabited worlds.
Presger translators are far from benign; in their formative
stages, for example. they think nothing of vivisecting or slaughtering their
age-mates. They must be taught human customs, everything from wearing clothes,
making small talk, drinking tea, and sitting on furniture to not casually
eating one another. Qven is no exception, and Reet very well may be at least
part translator, although his adopted parents have instilled human values in
him.
Leckie manages to make both characters, as well as the
endearing Enae, sympathetic, understandable, and even upon occasion admirable.
She introduces Enae first, inviting the reader into a complex universe through
a single relatable character. I had a harder time with Reet initially, but by
the time it was clear the story lines would merge, the deeper themes of
consent, becoming fully oneself, loving another as I-Thou, and the meaning of
being human had me hooked. I loved Leckie’s subtle hand in conveying
sophisticated, often bizzare cultural conventions without a trace of ramming
them down the reader’s throat.
Leckie also portrays gender conventions in ways that are
occasionally humorous—like the way the Imperial Radch insist on using “she” for
everyone, but Reet keeps correcting them, “I’m a he!” and Qven, for the first
time given a choice, insists on being an “e” (and, after seeing the
unconditional love and support of Reet’s three moms, makes a conscious choice
to become human).
Highly recommended.
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