The Republic of Memory by Mahmud El SayedMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
The one thing that really struck me from the beginning was the echoes of other recent big award winners--specifically the focus on translations and language in general. But even more than that, was how this setting (aboard a generation ship) really revolved around the divisions made by language and how embodied this novel felt.
Not easy, mind you, but definitely lived-in. I think I liked that the most.
But I should say I didn't truly vibe with it until much later, when the revolution really got underway--but that's a double edged sword right there, too.
I might be getting rather annoyed with this particular subgenre of generation ships + AI always defaulting with destroying the AIs either immediately or almost right away (across so many authors) and seeing a totally hapless and idiotic crew try to deal with an untenable life afterward.
It just feels like yet another example people always electing to make a horrible situation worse for all of the stupidest reasons and then doubling down when things get so much worse.
Sometimes I just want escapism. Not yet another mirror showing the same thing I see every day. But alas. That's a me problem.
This book is still pretty fascinating and interesting both culturally and thematically. Well worth a read.
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