Provenance, by Ann Leckie (Orbit, 978-0-316-38867-2, $26, hc, 439 pages) September
2017
A review
by Rich Horton
Provenance is Ann
Leckie’s fourth novel. The first three (Ancillary
Justice, Ancillary Sword, and Ancillary
Mercy) make up a trilogy about an “ancillary” of the Imperial Radch who
becomes involved in a conflict between two versions of the Emperor. This new
novel is set in the same universe, at roughly the same time, but outside the
Radch. It is engaging and fun but frankly seems just a little thin next to the
Ancillary series. There’s no crime in that – I think it’s a good thing when an
author reaches the point where her readers are glad to read each of her books,
and are satisfied by them – but also admit that they are not each equally as
good (or progressively better). Solid and enjoyable work is nothing to sneeze
at. That said, if I’m saying that, it probably means I don’t consider Provenance one of the best five or six
SF novels of the year – and that’s true. But it doesn’t disgrace the award by
its nomination either – and, indeed, it fits with all the nominees I’ve read so
far, in being enjoyable and entertaining but not exceptional.
The main character is Ingray, a decidedly privileged young
woman from the planet Hwae. Ingray’s mother Netano is a very powerful figure on
Hwae, and Ingray has long believed that her brother Danach is her mother’s
preferred heir. (In using terms like “young woman”, “mother”, “brother”, and “heir”
I’m glossing over some interesting complexities of the social and gender
organization on Hwae, including that people choose genders at roughly majority,
that there are three choices (he, she, and e), that children (at least in
powerful families) are often adopted), etc. etc.) So Ingray, in a desperate
effort to impress Netano, has arranged to retrieve Pahlad Budraikim, the disgraced
child of one of her mother’s rivals from “Compassionate Removal”, a ghastly
seeming prison planet used by the Hwae in lieu of the death penalty. And now
she has the person in question – except e claims to be someone else entirely.
And Ingray is broke.
So Ingray ends up, a bit fortuitously, with a trip back to
Hwae on a ship captained by one Uisine. But that has its owned complications –
in particular, Uisine is wanted for stealing his ship from the Geck. So the
Geck want him, but technicalities allow Uisine to take Ingray back home. Uisine
is guilty, with extenuating circumstances – he is one of a group of humans who
live on the Gecks’ homeworld, but who must be adapted to their aquatic
lifestyle. And his gills never came in.
Complications keeps piling up. There is Ingray and her
problems, Uisine and his, and “Garal”, as the person Ingray thought was Pahlad,
Burdraikim and eir problems. Things don’t get easier back on Hwae – Ingray gets
involved with some foreigners who want to study an area of “ruin glass”, which
has implications for Hwae’s own history, and its accepted beliefs about that
history, which are pretty fundamental to their culture. Then someone is
murdered. And another group, from the planet Omkem, invades and kidnaps a group
of children, looking for access to stargates …
There’s a lot going on, and it’s pretty involving stuff. It’s
mixed with worthwhile cultural details, varying from human group to human
group, and complicated further when aliens are involved. There’s some
believable and fun action. The characters are engaging. The exploration of
gender roles on Hwae, intertwined interestingly with class, is nice (there are
parallels with the way gender is chosen in J. Y. Yang’s Hugo-nominated novella “The
Black Tides of Heaven”, and frankly I think Leckie’s depictions of gender
selection more interesting than Yang’s). So, then, why did I say it sometimes
seems a bit thin? One reason is that everyone seems basically an early 21st
Century human, and lots of the background details of their lives don’t differ a
lot from our lives. Other than that, the whole book, while remaining fun, does
seem to work out a bit conveniently. It all adds up to a book I enjoyed plenty,
but a book I that I don’t quite think stands among the very best novels of 2017.
(I’ll caveat this by noting that while I know and am on good
terms with a great many SF writers, including several Hugo nominees this year,
I probably know Ann Leckie a bit better than some of the others, for the simple
reason that she lives in a neighboring suburb to mine, that we sometimes go to
the same grocery store, that our kids went to the same high school at about the
same time, and that she, for example, signed my copy of Provenance at a local independent book store. So take anything I
say with whatever heaps of salt you wish.)
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