- Hardcover: 479 pages
- Publisher: Tor Books; First Edition edition (Mar 2002)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 0312876343
- ISBN-13: 978-0312876340
- Product Dimensions: 21.7 x 15 x 3.7 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,345,170 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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The glue that holds the book together is the Great Bat. In all my literary tours of the universe I have never encountered a character like him. He prefers to be totally alone to think and study and solve puzzles. He does not wash, he does not dress, he does not travel; he eats and he thinks. Facinating. It is The Bat who finds the clues in the historic documents and puts everything together. Therefore, it is not until you get to the chapters featuring The Bat that the story gets exciting.
Science fiction is supposed to pose some interesting concepts for better living through technology and this book is no exception. There are people with enhanced bodies who stay forever young and healthly, but cannot reproduce. There is the predictive model that indicates all life in the Solar System will cease to exist unless the modifying variable is identified and controlled. There is the alien transmission that no one is able to decode that could be the variable. Each of these would make an exciting story, but they are not fully developed or explored. The story is ultimately about The Bat, his interaction with three computer systems, and his brilliant ability to think through complex problems that others cannot. If you are a fan of The Bat from other Sheffield novels, this is the book for you and I would rate it 4 stars. If The Bat does not do it for you, this is a pleasant read, but nothing to get excited about. No violence, some sexual descriptions, romance, some profanity.
In 2097 on the moon Ganymede, Alex Ligon, son of a family of trading giants, has rebuilt the "seine" computer network. However, his program predicts humanity will become extinct in less than a hundred years. On the asteroids near Jupiter, SETI researcher Milly Wu believes she has received an alien communication. Rustum "Bat" Battachariya, who collects weapons from the Great War, follows rumors of a doomsday weapon. He consults with Milly and her SETI peers on her findings even as Alex tries to meet with him on a family matter. When Bat learns that earthling Sebastian contains strange nodules inside his head, he wonders what they are and what damage they can cause.
DARK AS DAY, the sequel to COLD AS ICE, is incredibly complex yet brilliantly entertaining as the deep story line traverses the solar system. The plot contains cleverly inspired enigmas and even smarter solutions that work at hyperspeed due to the believable ensemble. Though quite dark, humor eases the tale from going too deep into the abyss. Even with a powerful vivid story line, the authentic feel to characters make Charles Sheffield's cerebral dark futuristic tale a triumph for genre fans.
Harriet Klausner
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