Alien Clay

Paperback, 432 pages

English language

Published Sept. 17, 2024 by Orbit.

ISBN:
978-0-316-57897-4
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1455617057
ASIN:
0316578975
ISFDB ID:
3286979
Goodreads:
202776726

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(4 reviews)

The planet of Kiln is where the tyrannical Mandate keeps its prison colony, and for inmates, the journey there is always a one-way trip. One such prisoner is Professor Arton Daghdev, xeno-ecologist and political dissident. Soon after arrival, he discovers that Kiln has a secret. Humanity is not the first intelligent life to set foot there.

In the midst of a ravenous, chaotic ecosystem are the ruins of a civilization, but who were the vanished builders and where did they go? If he can survive both the harsh rule of the camp commandant and the alien horrors of the world around him, then Arton has a chance at making a discovery that might just transform not only Kiln, but distant Earth as well.

5 editions

Fav book this year!

I really loved this book. It felt like the interest and passion in biology that Mikhail Bakunin exhibited in Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution but told ask a sci-fi epic@!

analyzing the conditions and contradictions of a human inmate labour camp upon an exoplanet with alien life Tchaikovsky looks at what makes us human, what mutualism and organization mean, and the struggles against domination.

I would liken this to The Dispossessed of Tchaikovsky's catalog and want you all to read it then get coffee with me and talk about the ups and downs.

Interesting take on the prison planet trope

I was hooked from the start with Tchaikovsky's description of sending prisoners to Kiln as freeze-dried corpsicles that are reanimated on arrival. Actually doable? Actually money-saving? Hell if I know. Grabbed my attention.

Kiln has life. Not only does it have life, it has monuments built be an intelligent species, but there's no sign of them. That's a secret that was kept from Earth by it's rulers, the Mandate. Arton Daghdev, our protagonist is an unorthodox xenobiologist. A prisoners because of the unorthodoxy. But also he didn't know because it was kept so tightly secret. And the last part of of the premise is that there aren't exactly species on Kiln. The flora and fauna, such as they are, are more agglomerations of species with one purpose each: a stomach and an eye and a leg muscle get together to form a symbiotic creature. But they can all split up …

Ideas naturales para conformar la ley humana

Estuvo mágico leer en secuencia "Surviving Daybreak" (que ni le he dicho al bookwyrm por que no hay registro), "An unkindness of ghosts" y "Alien Clay". Las tres tocan temas parecidos, pero la de Daybreak es malísima, puro god-mode del autor, la protagonista siempre al borde del colapso se detiene a aclarar que es asexual y se las tiene que ver con la flora y fauna de un planeta alienígeno. La de los ghosts también es de sexualidad divergente, no hay planeta pero sí condiciones de cárcel. La de alien clay tiene condiciones de cárcel y flora y fauna alienígena. ¡vaya!

De las tres esta es la más interesante.

Creo que la idea de Chaikovski es tomar la lectura cooperativista de la evolución de las especies y desplazarla miles de millones de años hacia el futuro. El resultado: fusión extrema de organismos. Hm, o parecido a lo que describen Lynn …