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Riding the Rock
  
Riding the Rock (Paperback)
by Stephen Baxter (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  (2 customer reviews)
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Product details
  • Paperback: 60 pages
  • Publisher: PS Publishing (30 Nov 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1902880595
  • ISBN-13: 978-1902880594
  • Product Dimensions: 20.6 x 14.4 x 1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 805,531 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #87 in  Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Authors, A-Z > B > Baxter, Stephen

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  • Other Editions: Hardcover  |  All Editions


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Baxter's bleak prose makes this grim future seem just sufficiently plausible, 15 Jan 2007
By Nicholas Whyte (Oud Heverlee, Belgium) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In Stephen Baxter's Riding the Rock, some of the soldiers fighting the eighteen thousand year war between humans and the alien Xeelee are under investigation for "anti-Doctrinal thinking". They have committed heresy by building a memorial to their dead -- an arch, beautifully portrayed on the front cover of this PS Publishing novella, on which each of the fallen is named individually. The ideological basis for the war is controlled by the Orwellian-sounding Commission for Historical Truth, which allows no room for individual commemoration; as Luca, the Commission Novice who is the viewpoint character, protests early on, "It's the species that counts."

Luca, along with his master and the enigmatic, attractive young woman officer who has brought them the report of heresy, is sent to the front to investigate. He ends up participating in an attack on the Xeelee at the galactic core, a location whose portrayal Gregory Benford assures us is "scientifically accurate", in an introduction which passionately argues the merits of "hard sf". Does it really matter, I wonder, if it is scientifically accurate or not? Will this become a worse story, if in ten or fifty years it turns out that Benford and his fellow astrophysicists have got it completely wrong? Is, for instance, Zelazny's "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" of less literary merit because there are no dying civilisations with beautiful dancers on Mars?

In the end, the Commission is revealed as dehumanising and inhuman in its efforts to preserve humanity. Baxter's general argument against the awfulness of treating humans as statistics in a war without end is well made, and his portrayal of the conscription and brainwashing of child soldiers has unhappy resonances in several of today's African conflicts. Luca's transition from zealous acceptance of Doctrine to horror at its human consequences makes this a rite-of-passage story with a real kick.

I did scratch my head a bit at the actual concept of "riding the rock" which gives the story its title. It's a rather unsatisfactory transposition of trench warfare into a far-future context which seems to me unlikely to have any chance of success in the implied time available, especially given the supposed realist constraints of hard sf. Significantly the story is dedicated to Baxter's own grandfather, who it is implied was himself a survivor of the First World War trenches.

Most of his comrades must have ended up in cemeteries, remembered each November by those left behind. Which leads me back to the core problem of the story: it's difficult to conceive of even the strongest totalitarian regime successfully repressing the human instinct to commemorate loss -- indeed, the smartest ideologists have always used funerals as propaganda. But of course many of the best stories are written about improbable events, and Baxter's bleak prose makes this grim future seem just sufficiently plausible.
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