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The Golden Transcendence (book 3 of The Golden Age) by John C. Wright
pub: TOR. 350 page hardback. Price: $25.95 (US), $35.95 (CAN). ISBN: 0-765-30756-1

check out website: www.tor.com


The world of hard SF is a difficult one to master. High technology and unhuman characters often make it hard to keep a coherent plotline through the complex created future.

Even in those books without real clarity, a lot of interesting and inventive things can be found, as I found reading the three books in John C. Wright's 'Golden Age' trilogy.


The books tell of Phaethon, the son of one of the Solar System's richest men. Convinced that the civilisation (or Oecumene as Wright calls it) is being held back by lack of progress to the stars, Phaethon builds the greatest ship ever built, the Phoenix Exultant. Successive setbacks in the first book, 'The Golden Age' led Phaethon into a maze of conspiracy theories that resulted in his expulsion.

In the concluding volume, some of Phaethon's worst fears are realised as the remnants of a colony long thought dead attack. Phaethon and his ship must fight a series of incredible battles to ensure that there are any of them left to populate the stars.
It's a good story, even if the plot twists at times do come too fast to surprise and it occasionally gets a bit over the top. But despite the often-extreme fantastic events, there's always a core of humanity left over that keeps the story grounded.

In fact, if there's anything Wright's guilty of, it's not using his excellent characterisation to the best of his abilities. Phaethon and his wife Daphne, the one-man army Marshal Atkins and Phaethon's Sire, Helion, not to mention the hosts of AI and peers, fascinated me.

I would have loved to have seen more close-up detail exploring their interactions as happened in the middle of the first and beginning of the second books. It was when the characters were separated slightly from the extreme technology and allowed to act as characters that I truly loved the writing. The plot was so over-the-top and overly complex that it often stifled this feeling of a simple story.

I fully enjoyed reading the three books, but the level to which Wright amps up the conspiracies and allows his super-technologies rather than characters control the plot is often frustrating. I would have preferred a slightly toned-down and localised plot that focused on the people rather than the galactic-wide attempt at seeing everything. In the end, it's a person's story not a system's.

That said, 'The Golden Age' trilogy is still well-written and captures the imagination. It's definitely worth reading and bodes well for Wright in the future, but I'd prefer it if he toned down proceedings slightly next time and allowed us quality time with his creations.

Tomas L. Martin


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