Audiobook Review
Polostan (2024)
by Neal Stephenson
Neal Stephenson is probably my favorite author of popular/genre fiction. He doesn't aspire to literary fiction status, but he is a genuinely inventive writer of popular fiction, whether it be in his science fiction past or his thriller/dystopia/historical fiction present. The thing about Neal Stephenson novels is that the reader is never bored by the ideas or the action, even when his books extend to lengths well beyond what is standard in the book industry. Cryptonomicon, his representative on the 1,001 Books to Read Before You Die list, has a 40 hour plus length Audiobook edition. Unfortunately, someone has gotten wise at his publisher because Polostan arrives as a clearly marked "Volume 1" of something called the "Bomb Light" cycle. I'm assuming that the entire cycle is centered on the protagonist of Polostan: Dawn Rae Bjornsen, a plucky with a capital p early 20th century Communist/Anarchist of mixed Russian/American ancestry.
This book essentially sets up her backstory: An early childhood in post-Revolutionary Russia, girlhood in America with her Russian-agent Dad during the Great Depression and then back to Russia after a series of adventures as a young woman. The "present" of volume 1 finds her held captive by Russian intelligence as they evaluate her potential use as an agent. Polostan uses a series of flashbacks as Dawn is vetted by the predecessor of the KGB. Even knowing this going in, I wasn't angry, since it is, indeed, a chore to take on a thousand page novel, as is usually the case with Stephenson.
It's hard not to consider the impact of English writer of speculative fiction China Miéville, who is well known for introducing Marxist-Leninist/Communist/Anarchist themes into his speculative fiction, on Stephenson's choice of theme. Stephenson is firmly in spy/espionage/thriller territory here, there isn't a single whiff of science-fiction in this book. A reader might be advised to wait for whatever film/tv edition this series generates before reading the book.
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