A teenager aboard the Hope, a giant spaceship on a long voyage to colonize another world, seeks freedom from her rich, tyrannical father with a long-shot bid to join the first team of planetary settlers.
In this SF series opener, Hoff assumes readers are savvy enough to need no introductions to genre concepts like a “generation ship,” a deep-space ark taking breeding earthlings on a millennialong trek to a new life on another planet. The Hope is one such vessel, now 30 years away from the destination planet, Shindashir. But ship life is stifling for Anastasia Cartier—aka Anya—the 15-year-old daughter of the venal Thomas Cartier, the wealthiest man aboard and, hence, the population’s major behind-the-scenes influence (including on criminal activities). Controlling his family with a nightmarish web of surveillance, Thomas wants Anya to remain on the ship to marry 25-year-old rising officer Ryan Lancet—which will not only affirm the Cartier power base, but also continue the family’s rare, White Anglo bloodline. Anya wants to break from her dysfunctional dynasty by joining the first vanguard of departing colonists, but she faces multiple obstacles, including being unfairly regarded as a privileged, spoiled rich kid. Worse, her ruthless father becomes violent when he does not get his way. A surprise ally for Anya is her new workmate in the ship’s greenhouses, dreadlocked teen Borsk King, declared doomed and nonreproducing material because of a rare genetic condition but secretly the best hacker on the Hope. Yet is he good enough to thwart Thomas’ machinations? Whereas other authors might indulge in breathless, Arthur C. Clarke–style descriptions of starship engineering and vast cosmic vistas, Hoff focuses instead on the psychological claustrophobia suffered by a hero in a cramped minitechnocracy where arranged mating via DNA optimization is the norm. On the Hope, rampant spying, loss of privacy, and betrayal go hand in hand with numerous regulations designed to protect the innocent (but which somehow fail). In a standard, time-proven, future-dystopia trope, Anya is caught between potential love interests who are both captivating and utterly impossible. Thomas makes one of the more compelling bad-dad villains this side of Darth Vader in this engaging, if sometimes talky, tale.
A smart, far-future space saga with a sympathetic protagonist facing stranglehold parental control.