"The Clockwork Rocket" is the first book in a science fiction trilogy called "Orthogonal". It was written by Greg Egan and published in 2011.
Imagine this: fields of light, literal fields of plants that give off light where people live and work; people that have an extensive ability to shape shift, being able to be a shapeless blob, have human form, four legs or arms, etc. That's the initial setting of this story and it focuses in a girl called Yalda.
Where Yalda lives, a rather rural region, she's ostracized because she's a solo, meaning she doesn't have a male twin (for a woman to give birth she dies and normally divides in four babies, two sets of twins where one is female and the other male). However, she has an advantage; she's bigger and is able to endure much more physical stress than most people. Anyway, this book tells her story. From going to school, to getting in interested in astronomy, going to university and researching into something that will have a tremendous effect on the world. They're Hurtlers (think of it as analogues to asteroids that take the meaning of their name literally), they're more dangerous than anything else that ever appeared and cause an Einstein-like revolution, where Yalda as a scientist gives the first steps. But there's more, Yalda and her colleagues come up with a solution for the danger of the Hurtlers and they'll do everything they can to concretize it and protect their planet. I'll just give a hint, it involves orthogonality in space-time.
I should give a warning, "Orthogonal" is very hard science fiction, since it introduces some concepts that can be quite anti-intuitive and hard to grasp. That's because it happens in a completely different universe, based in Riemann geometry. Just so you know some of the consequences are: light has no specific speed; there's such thing as infinite speed; "hotter than infinitely hot"; and all the rest that isn't discussed in this book.
There's an attractive attribute to "Clockwork Rocket", since it has a very sci-fi tang to its style. The story is told in a somewhat drier way than usual (compared to mainstream sci-fi), because it primes for the logicality of what's happens instead of the immediate emotions (but not completely). For those not used to science fiction, it's a landmark in the more serious section of the genre and quite rewarding when handled well, as it is the case.
Yalda as a character is very interesting, mostly due to her motivations towards what she does; she's dedicated and revolutionary in a world dominated by men. Well... a novel always improves with a strong and resolute protagonist.
I would recommend this developing and underpublicized trilogy, because it's a good and consistent, but not over the top, piece of hard science fiction (so hard to get nowadays) and a promise of a few more hundreds pages of mind-boggling explanations and diagrams. By the way, there's actual diagrams in the book, like in scientific books and a quite hefty section at the end of the book which handles the science behind "Orthogonal".
If you do read "Clockwork Rocket" be prepared for a few intense sessions of thinking, because you won't understand the book if you don't roll around a little in Riemann geometry and its consequences (don't worry, it's all explained in the book even if it needs to a little unraveled). It's definitely a must to all science fiction admirers.
Till next time,
M.I.T.H. (ManInsideTheHelm)