Tag Archives: Jack McDevitt

The Devil’s Eye

Literary agent Nathan Bransford is always coming up with something interesting to post. The other day it was one that sounds old but was new to me: If you could live in the world of one novel, which would you choose? I’d choose the space opera world of Alex Benedict and Chase Kolpath, as created by SciFi author Jack McDevitt. Actually there are four novels. Any one of them would do fine.

I’ve read all four. Began with Polaris and then its wonderful sequel Seeker, only to discover that I missed the first one A Talent for War. So I read and enjoyed it, too, before finishing the fourth, The Devil’s Eye. Now it seems there will be a fifth one, Echo, this fall. Their world, in which there is so little crime the police are happy to get a new case, seems ideal. Their planet, Rimway, is in a galaxy far, far away, in the arm of Orion–my favorite constellation.

Not everyone gets to travel by starship like Alex and Chase do, but the opportunity is there. Just flitting about in gravity-free skimmers would be pleasant enough. (Although I do wish they would realize that someone is always tampering with theirs and plan accordingly.) Also having one’s personal AI, linked in to the galaxy-wide net to help research anything by voice or avatar. But what I like most is the way McDevitt writes. Conversationally. I flow along with the story, happily ensconced in the moment,  not entirely concerned about where events are going. Just enjoying the ride and hoping it never ends.

Infinity Beach

Jack McDevitt is one fine reason to keep reading science fiction. His future world is compelling and while short of the hard scifi I usually prefer, his tales are nevertheless, as Stephen King says in a blurb, "riveting."

This one fits the mold. It’s a multiple-murder mystery set in a future where starships are so common that rich people have their own starship yachts. It’s an alien-contact story, but I won’t give away any of the other details. It drags a little at times, but you can always feel that the promise of the ride is just down the trail a ways. And the ending doesn’t disappoint. Give it a try, for the characters and the worlds he creates, as he puts it, in a universe of winds and echoes.