While Paul J McAuley would go on to become of the leading lights of modern British sf, Four Hundred Stars bears all the marks of a difficult first novel. The set-up is reasonably interesting, as a military / scientific expedition sets out to discover whether the seemingly unintelligent natives of a terraformed world are connected to the mysterious ‘enemy’ attacking humanity on the other side of the galaxy. Unfortunately the novel then slows to a snail’s pace as the expedition observes the planets flora and fauna. This pacing is the real killer here, with the over-extended travelogues making a relatively short novel (250 pages) seem like a hard slog, whole the denouement is rushed out infodump fashion in the last few pages.
None of the characters particularly appealed to me, and the manner in which the Shakespeare quoting lead’s back-story was unveiled seemed a little clumsy, while the prose is at best functional.
This is the first of three novels (plus short stories) based in the same universe, though compared to other sf series McAuley’s given background thus far seems fairly generic and unmemorable – hopefully the series will improve.
A few good ideas, but far too clumsy in execution to recommend to anyone other than McAuley completists. A shaky start.