Images: the covers of both books in the double press are shown. Both are cyberpunk street scenes with bright neon colors. On the left is Red Star Hustle showing a night street from above with a person running downward with neon green graffiti art on the building walls. Across the top in bright red is red star hustle. Below that in yellow is nebula award winning author Sam J Miller. To the right is the second book cover showing a person standing in the center of the road viewed head on. There are buildings on both sides towering past the top of the image and a spiral galaxy can be seen in the distant sky. Across the top in yellow is Mary Robinette Kowal, hugo and nebula award winning author. Below that in large letters is Apprehension.
I was pumped to see Saga Press put out a double book like this. It has been a while since I have seen one of these fun texts where you flip it over in the middle and start anew. The draw of the book for me was a favorite author - Sam J. Miller - putting out the novel Red Star Hustle. I was not only excited to read more from him, but also to see him take on a cyberpunk space opera style that I had not previously seen from him. The bonus was getting to be introduced to a second author who I was not familiar with previously- Mary Robinette Kowal. Her entry Apprehension was attractive as a sort of crime thriller space opera of a shorter, novella length.
I have never reviewed a double before, but it seems best to just review each book. I was worried that might be a large disparity in quality between the two making them difficult to rate. Both books ended up being about 4 stars for me. Imperfect but highly enjoyable.
Red Star Hustle follows two main characters points of view: a young sex worker in space who is framed for the murder of one of his clients and an agent tasked with tracking him down. I saw that other reviews found it too sexual, but I did not. I am not into long drawn out graphic sex scenes and I did not find those in this book to be so. They captured the romance between the protagonist and his love interest- heir to a massive empire whose details I will leave out so as not to spoil things. There was a fairly decent variety of characters of varied demographics with complex flaws and strengths. Addiction is a factor tying many of the most prominent characters together at different phases- long term sobriety, acceptance and attempting to start, and one who has not fully grasped his own addiction.
I assume the author or someone close to him is in 12 step programs because there was a lot of that in addiction discussions. As a person who owes much of my own escape from the horrors of addiction to the community found in 12 step programs, I get it. That said, I wish there was a little more variety. 12 step programs don't really work much for more than community and are highly flawed- including the demeaning of treatments that are now shown to be very effective such as suboxone and treating any mistake as something that forces you to start all over with your "clean time." Unlearning this stuff took me a bit of education and humility. I don't think 12 steps programs are bad, there are great mutual aid elements, especially within groups who splintered off and removed some of the garbage, just that they should not be considered the gold standard. I will end this tangent by saying that this represents a variety of addictions well but is limited in the solution.
Miller is excellent at world building and I really felt immersed in the spaces he created in this book from inside ships to elaborate societal structures and inequities. The complex portrayal of sex work was also welcome. I enjoyed the entire story and felt it had a satisfying ending. I do think the book needed to be longer in order to properly explore the twists and turns the story took. There are at least three different times where Aran has an epiphany seemingly out of nowhere about an elaborate plan and shift in storyline. The first one I forgave despite not knowing how he came to the conclusion. The others though were too much. I enjoyed the book enough that I gladly would have read another 100 pages if they helped integrate the twists a bit more. I am not talking about excessive exposition, but anything to show how Aran came to the conclusions he did.
I am happy to have another Sam J Miller book on my shelf and look forward to anything he puts out next. I would love more cyberpunk stories. We essentially live in the stupidest cyberpunk timeline here in the USA at the moment and I crave something a bit more queer, flashy, and somehow uncharacteristically optimistic.
Kowal's Apprehension felt like a good piece of fiction to pick up next. It allowed me to keep my head in outer space for a little while longer. This book also had a great mix of characters. I loved that the protagonist was a badass older woman with a southern USA accent and a variety of trade histories including neurosurgery. Characters like these can sometimes be written to a fault- either a grandma character whose whole identity is that, or a older person who is exactly like everyone else. I appreciated the inclusion of things like arthritis, disability, complex trauma, fragility, etc along with wisdom, strength, perseverance, family, and so on. She's a grandma driven to protect her family as well as someone digging into a mystery.
It is difficult to speak too much more about the novella without tons of spoilers. I will say that I enjoyed the thrill ride that Kowal took me on and felt immersed in the story. I do feel the book also suffered a little from a sudden shift in the ending. The book almost feels rushed and like a different book altogether when then end is wrapped up. It would have been cool if more time was spent wrapping things up.
Overall, I was happy to experience another story from a favored author and to be introduced to a new one. I look forward to read more from both Miller and Kowal in the future.
This was also posted to my goodreads and storygraph.
