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Book Review of Lethe

Lethe
Lethe
Author: Tricia Sullivan
Genre: Science Fiction & Fantasy
Book Type: Paperback
reviewed on + 1568 more book reviews


This one is kinda grim.... In this future Earth, genetic warfare has mutated humans into several different (still warring) varieties and resources are getting scarcer each year. One young---more or less human---woman discovers the tag ends of a centuries-old plot to rule the world(s.) Her search for more information---and for allies---gets really difficult, since it's impossible to know whom to trust. Would you want allies who have been aware for their entire lives that they are going to turn into a cannibalistic monsters as soon as they are out of their teens? Not an easy decision, huh?

From back cover: It is the year 2166. Eighty years have passed since the Gene Wars devastated the Earth, decimating the human population and giving rise to myriad new life-forms. Only planetwide rule by an oligarchy of once-human brains in permanent computer interface has allowed "pure" humans to survive. Now, among the dolphins of Australia, Jenae Kim stumbles on the information that could mean a new beginning for human civilization: information that the government is determined to keep secret--even if they have to kill her.
On the edge of the solar system, researcher Daire Morales falls through an interstellar gate and discovers an Edenic world to which refugee children from the Gene Wars escaped long ago--but at a terrible price. The onset of adulthood promises a monstrous fate, and now the colony's adolescent leader, Tsering, faces her own violent demise. Only when Jenae exposes the long-buried truth about the Gene Wars does Tsering realize that the memories trapped in the planet's strange, sentient trees have the power to save--or destroy--not only the colony but the hope of humaniy itself.