The Actual Star

A Novel

No cover

Monica Byrne, Monica Byrne: The Actual Star (Paperback, 2021, HarperLuxe)

paperback, 736 pages

Published Sept. 14, 2021 by HarperLuxe.

ISBN:
978-0-06-311788-4
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5 stars (4 reviews)

4 editions

Science fiction as I've always wanted it

5 stars

(em português → sol2070.in/2023/09/Fic%C3%A7%C3%A3o-cient%C3%ADfica-como-sempre-quis )

"The Actual Star" (2022), by Monica Byrne, is the kind of book I'm always looking for in science fiction, but rarely find. It combines several of the topics that interest me most today: post-apocalyptic utopia, anarchism, psychedelics, climate emergency, regenerative technologies, cosmo-spiritual questions, etc.

The summary doesn't look like much: three interconnected stories set a thousand years apart - in 1012, 2012 and 3012 - that use Maya mythology to talk about reincarnation, collapse and regeneration. In fact, as soon as I read the synopsis, I wished distance, imagining something new age, with "age of Aquarius", Maya calendar, or "conspirituality". At the very least, it sounded like a hackneyed story, like that average movie "Cloud Atlas" (2012), by the Wachowski, or the great "The Fountain" (2006), by Darren Aronofsky.

But I saw a lot of effusive praise, even from people I admire like Kim Stanley …

Deeply and Passionately Researched, Woven Together Brilliantly

5 stars

You could tell throughout that the author had thoroughly researched Belize and had a deep passion for the culture. The book tells three stories: past, present, and future, and weaves them together both plot-wise and thematically. The twins that were reincarnated throughout the timelines weren't always likeable, but were always compelling.

The future track had some elements that recalled the Culture novels. It did a great job of exploring how currently technology may evolve in a post-capitalist society.

Makes me dream about going to Belize and seeing the ATM cave myself.

Ending was a little bit sudden, but mostly satisfying.

A real achievement

5 stars

This novel alternates between three connected timelines, each separated by 1000 years from the next, each on the cusp of social (and environmental) change.

The future timeline is set in a utopian (though by no means perfect) global nomadic society, organised around principles of mutual aid. It's refreshing to see a vision of how humankind might adapt positively to the challenges facing us, even as some of the fault lines in that vision are exposed over the course of the story.

The other timelines are just as vividly drawn, and feel researched and sensitively written. All three are deftly woven into the greater whole, and I found reading the chapters in blocks (one for each timeline) helped me appreciate the connections being drawn across all three.

This will definitely be going onto my to-reread pile, as I'm sure there's a whole lot that I've missed on my first pass through. …