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BlindsightBlindsight by Peter Watts

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It occurred to me that I've never written a full-on review of Blindsight, so here it is:

Peter Watts's Blindsight is, without a doubt, the most important science-fiction novel written in the past 20 years. No other novel written recently comes close to matching Blindsight's attempt at prescience. Most science fiction novels are either fantasy (see: Iain M. Banks, David Weber, or me), or are books about the present (see: Charles Stross, William Gibson). Only Peter Watts has attempted to talk about the future in a meaningful way, and Blindsight is the novel that does that better than any.

Blindsight is, for its plot, a first-contact novel: the main character, Siri, recounts how the Earth was visited by alien probes that, all at once, imaged all of the Earth. A frenzied attempt to discover where the probe came from leads to the discover of a massive slower-than-light visitor approaching the solar system. The spaceship Thesus, an antimatter-powered ramscoop STL vessel, is sent out to visit it, determine the threat level, and act accordingly.

But Blindsight is really a confrontation: between human beings and aliens who are really freakin' alien. These are neither the rubber-forehead humanoids of star trek or the transformed demons of archaic memory, but just about the most alien aliens a human being has ever imagined. Within that confrontation, Watts has room to discuss the many different kinds of humanity, reflected in his crew: the linguist whose mind has been fractured into six different personalities, each with its own language processing specialties; the science officer whose nervous system has been rewired so he can become the ship; the military specialist who can see and act through six or more robot soldiers at one time; the commander whose brain is wired to be the perfect leader by being the perfect psychopath, so hyper-attuned to manipulating human beings he thinks of ordinary human beings as prey; and the autistic translation specialist, whose job is to translate what these people do into "meaningful" reports to the ordinary human back home who think they control this crew. Each of these brings a unique view, and Watts does a masterful job of showing these views. And each shows how technology dehumanizes and disenfranchises; only those willing to sacrifice some essential humanity have the tools necessary to survive Watt's almost transhuman but still frighteningly plausible future.

Within this confrontation, Watts tells us a story about human consciousness, and how it gets in the way: if we think about dancing, we fall. If we think about thinking about writing, we falter. What is consciousness for?

There are so many ideas in Blindsight it's hard to discuss which ones I like best. As an erotica writer, was fascinated by Watts' observation that technology can perversely satisfice human desires. By the time of the setting of the book, robots and virtual reality have so satisficed the sexual market that dealing with real people, with their real problems and their meaty, sweaty bodies, was considered kinky.

Science fiction readers love "sensawunda," that moment when the books makes you go "Oh, wow." Watts is the anti-sensawunda. When the linguist figures out what's really going on, when she delivers the final blow that tells the POV character, it was, for me, a sensahorra unlike any a book has delivered. It wasn't the shock of The Wasp Factory or Use Of Weapons, it was "Oh my ancient gods, if he's right, we are all so fucking doomed."

And not in the sense that the characters in the book are all doomed. In sense that we, you and I are all doomed. Because Watts' book has a central thesis, the mention of which would be the biggest spoiler of all. No, really, read Blindsight. And realize that Watts makes a convincing argument, and we really are all fucking doomed.

Blindsight has been in and out of print. An ebook edition is available for free at Peter Watt's website.

View all my reviews at Goodreads.

Date: 2011-10-31 03:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fayanora.livejournal.com
I loved this book. Fucking awesome. I may read it again. A must-read.

I wonder what it says about me that I loved his vision of the future? (Not counting the aliens or the vampires.)

Date: 2011-10-31 09:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zanfur.livejournal.com
The thing I did immediately following reading this review is go to amazon and order this book. If it's even half as awesome as you say it is, I must read it.

Date: 2011-10-31 03:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mikstera.livejournal.com
Yes, the book really is that good...

For more from Peter Watts, you can find his blog here (http://www.rifters.com/crawl).

For more "sensahorra", I recommend (if that's the right word...)The Things (http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/watts_01_10/).

Date: 2011-10-31 04:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] adam-0oo.livejournal.com
Ooooo, this has been sitting on my shelf for about a year now. I bought it from the bookstore because it was on sale and had a picture of a space ship on it. I started reading it this morning.

Date: 2011-10-31 05:18 pm (UTC)
solarbird: (Lecturing)
From: [personal profile] solarbird
I read Harmony before reading this last night off your recommendation post. You might enjoy that. I certainly did - I think I preferred it to this novel - tho' that is no doubt in part due to order of reading.

Sadly, I cannot recommend titles and authors for you, because it has been too many decades, but you may also enjoy reading up on fascist social theory. Not reading either Italian or German, I've never been able to read original sources, so I've been stuck with analysis, but there wasn't just a new Soviet man - there was a new Fascist man, as well. Of course, you may already know this. Regardless, the results of those experiments are enlightening and applicable.

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