Saturday, February 20, 2021

Record of a Spaceborn Few

Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3)Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The third book in the series is once again set in the same universe but featuring different characters. Only one character, Tessa, connects to book #1–she is Ashby’s sister. The books are essentially stand-alone.

This volume focuses on the mostly humans who live in the Fleet: the generation ships which brought humans into contact with other species after Earth suffered too much environmental damage and had to be abandoned. Hundreds of years after leaving the Sol system, these giant ships are still home to many thousands of people, the ones who chose to live their lives in space rather than seek out other places and planets. The ships orbit a sun given to the Fleet by the Galactic Commons, who admitted humans for membership not all that long ago.

Record of a Spaceborn Few follows a handful of distinct characters as they live, work, and grow aboard one of these ships. We get to witness their personal struggles as we follow their different journeys and stages in life, all the while learning the culture of Exodan spacers. Becky Chambers is a brilliant world-builder.

It’s a completely character-driven story. To say the pace is leisurely is putting it mildly. The characters barely cross paths, yet by the end, I felt like I was ready to sign up for Eyas’ new workshop and live in a hex. An absolutely fascinating exploration of how human culture might evolve to thrive in space. I especially loved how the ships were designed to eliminate hunger and homelessness, caste, and the illusion of rank. Everyone contributes, and NOTHING is wasted.

For readers’ advisors: character doorway is primary, setting secondary. Intermittent swearing. No onscreen violence, although there are some deadly accidents. LGBTQIA people are normal and unremarkable, and nonbinary gender pronouns are routinely used for some characters—xe & xyr, which I wish we’d adopt in real life, as it’s WAY more clear than using plural pronouns.

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