Jump to content

Off Armageddon Reef

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nihonjoe (talk | contribs) at 02:01, 16 September 2015 (→‎Plot summary: much better, rmvd tag). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Off Armageddon Reef
AuthorDavid Weber
IllustratorEllisa Mitchell (maps)
Cover artistStephen Youll
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherTor Books
Publication date
January 9, 2007
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages608
ISBN0-7653-1500-9
OCLC70867041
813/.54 22
LC ClassPS3573.E217 O35 2007
Followed byBy Schism Rent Asunder 

Off Armageddon Reef is a science fiction novel by American author David Weber, published by Tor Books. It is the first book in the open-ended Safehold series. It follows a group of survivors who have settled a planet they name Safehold, a place where they had sought to escape from a terrible war, but that becomes the scene of a new struggle to uphold the principles of human civilization.

Plot summary

After a desperate and ultimately lost struggle against a genocidal alien foe in the 24th Century, the 8 million survivors of Earth fled to Safehold to carefully rebuild civilization. The plan was to temporarily block industrialization to avoid detection, but civil war erupted over the corrupt colony administrator's plan to trap mankind on their refuge world at a Middle Ages level of technology. Eric Langhorne plotted to rule as the deified founder of the Church of God Awaiting, a religion that viewed innovation as heresy punishable by torture and death.

When Pei Shan-Wei defied him, he murdered her and all her followers, before being killed in turn, nearly eliminating every colonist with memory of Earth. Though Shan-Wei had not predicted how far Langhorne would go, she had prepared a backup plan: She secreted away the android that contained the personality and memories of a heroic human military officer, Nimue Alban, with all the technology and weapons needed to uplift Safehold. Nimue awoke 800 years later and was informed of what had come to pass.

Nimue accepted the mission to destroy Langhorne's legacy and used mobile spy technology to examine the world. However, it became clear that as an apparent woman, her influence would be less than it should be. She therefore changed into an apparent male and took the name of Merlin before travelling to the Kingdom of Charis — a relatively advanced region of Safehold with a somewhat free-thinking approach to religion. Merlin gained the trust of King Haarahld of Charis by interfering in an assassination attempt on Haarahld's son, Crown Prince Cayleb of Charis, saving his life.

Merlin was made Cayleb's personal guardian and a de facto adviser to the king. He began to introduce technology that, while not technically proscribed by the Safeholdian Holy Writ, was advanced. While most of Safehold was at a 16th-century level of technology, Merlin introduced better sailing vessels, improved gunpowder, and greatly improved seaborne cannons, very equivalent to the 18th-19th century Age of Sail. But, the Church had grown increasingly suspicious of Charisian power and the kingdom's culture of innovation.

The Church rallied every seafaring nation of Safehold against Charis, including its rivals, a nominal longtime ally, and a neutral party that participated in the campaign with great reluctance. This demonstrated the Church's power but also set into motion events that would cause a great deal of strife and, more importantly, the end of the Church's unquestioned authority in Safehold. Merlin's space-age surveillance network allowed for the deployment of Charisian forces with maximum strategic effect.

Largely due to the technology introduced by Merlin, the combined attacking fleets of galleys were annihilated by the small Charis fleet of heavily armed galleons, although King Haarahld was killed in battle. The book ends at his funeral, about one month after the end of the battle, with Cayleb having become the first King of a Safeholdian realm to rule completely without the Church's consent. This marked beginning of a global movement that is an analogue to the English Reformation.[1]

Theme

Through the novel, Weber uses the conflict between technology and religion to explore the ability of people and cultures to make choices, rather than have the choice made for them. Weber himself has stated in an interview that the novel was not an attack on organized religion, but more "about the use of any ideology or belief structure to manipulate, control and coerce". It is this concept of control to prevent the right, ability and responsibility to make choices forms the thematic backbone of the novel.[2]

In many ways this book is about the human condition at its core, set in a future world of high and low technology. It highlights how the choices individuals make on a day-to-day basis, as well as the relationships we build define the character and quality of our lives. Classic, and often interesting, themes such as 1) the ability of money and power to corrupt otherwise "good" individuals, 2) the influence of duty and morals in relation to the good of the "many", 3) the power of faith and its tension with orthodoxy, 4) the importance of truth balanced with the need for secrecy, 5) the drive for human innovation and progress, 6) the hopeful human will to survive, even in the face of overwhelming odds, 7) the separation of church and state, and 8) the tension of whether the "ends" truly justify the "means".

Concept and creation

Author David Weber says he was setting out to create a series in which high technology fused with "the feel of a 'last defender of elfland', but without the urban fantasy matrix"; the cybernetic protagonist who is unsure of his own humanity "grew naturally for me out of that initial basic premise." Weber explains that like many of his novels, the meat of the novel grew from questions such as "What set of circumstances could create a situation in which my PICA hero (Personality Integrated Cybernetic Avatar) came into existence? And given those circumstances, and the personality of Nimue Alban, how was 'Merlin' going to react?"[3] As Weber puts it, "The lead character, Nimue, is a brilliant tactical officer, only about 27 years old at the time of her biological death, and has never known a time when humanity wasn’t fighting a losing battle for its very existence." She awakens, in the body of an android, 800 years after her death, into a world which has retreated nearly completely into tyranny and ignorance. Even with magnificent technological resources, how in the world is she going to make things better?

The concept of the technologically superior Gbaba aliens, determined to exterminate all life forms that could be a threat to them, resembles the Achuultani aliens from Weber's earlier novel Mutineers' Moon, the first novel in his Empire from the Ashes trilogy. Furthermore, the plot of the third novel in that trilogy, Heirs of Empire, involves a small group of people with high technology using their knowledge of military weapons and tactics to assist a group of humans living on a world of low technology. This resembles how on the planet Safehold the character Merlin assists the Charisians in their struggle with the Church and its allies.

Reception and reviews

Off Armageddon Reef was a cumulative bestseller,[4] entering the New York Times Best Seller list at number 33.[5] It was listed by Booklist as one of the top ten SF audiobooks of 2008[6] (read by Oliver Wyman) and was nominated in 2009 for the Arthur C. Clarke Award for best science fiction novel published in the United Kingdom.[7]

The Guardian found Off Armageddon Reef to have a predictable ending and called the character development "perfunctory", but applauded Weber's pacing and vision.[8]

Notes

Unlike the following four books, the title of Off Armageddon Reef does not come from a hymn. Instead, the title refers to one of the battles in the book, as well as a location that is central to the series' backstory.

Audiobook (Book on CD)

  • The reader of the Audiobook version of both Off Armageddon Reef and By Schism Rent Asunder was Oliver Wyman. The reader was switched to Jason Culp for both By Heresies Distressed and A Mighty Fortress.

References

  1. ^ Weber, David (2007). Off Armageddon Reef. Tor. ISBN 0-7653-1500-9.
  2. ^ White, Sake (2007-12-01). "Interview with David Weber on Off Armageddon Reef".
  3. ^ Adams, John Joseph (May 7, 2007). SciFi.com "Interview with David Weber". SCI FI Weekly. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  4. ^ "Cumulative SFFH Books on 2007 General Bestseller Lists". Locus Magazine. 12 February 2008.
  5. ^ "Best Sellers: Hardcover Fiction". New York Times. February 11, 2007. Retrieved July 6, 2009.
  6. ^ Moyer, Jessica (May 15, 2008). "Top 10 SF/Fantasy Audiobooks: 2008". Booklist.
  7. ^ "ACCA 2009 - the long list". The London international festival of science fiction and fantastic film. April 2009.
  8. ^ Brown, Eric (2 February 2008). "Virtual heist". The Guardian.