In Jeffrey’s SF sequel, an earthling must thwart a shadowy conspiracy that could lead to the end of the universe.
It’s 2217, and humanity can travel from an environmentally devastated Earth to distant stars via “voidoids”—invisible space gates of an unknown nature. But even with thousands of planets to explore, only one Earth-like world, Silvanus, has been found. Navigator Aidan Macallan contacted and explored it in Through a Forest of Stars(2017), and it turned out to be off-limits to colonists, due to a sentient entity there called the Rete; it’s not hostile, but it’s wary of the destructive potential of Homo sapiens. Now, on Earth, radical environmentalists and a reactionary, anti-science political buffoon named Houda Thunkit are at the forefront of a movement against space exploration. At the same time, voidoids are becoming unstable and closing down, potentially stranding outposts, ships, and colonies across the cosmos forever. Aiden now commands his own state-of-the-art starship, the Sun Wolf, and he and his crew form an uneasy alliance with Earth’s military to determine who’s disrupting the voidoids. The stakes rise considerably when scientists reveal that the gates are key to keeping all matter in balance; without them, the universe will dissipate into nothingness. Jeffrey’s yarn is a dandy cosmic mystery conceived on the vast scale of an Arthur C. Clarke or Olaf Stapledon epic. Some moments have a New Age–y tone, and it’s a bit odd when jazz music, a real-life pursuit of the author, is revealed to be particularly important to the plot. But there’s a gallery of well-drawn, diverse characters that may pleasantly remind readers of Star Trek; a memorably sinister cabal of villains; and even a smattering of romance. There’s also no shortage of imaginative perils along the way.
A fine spacefaring adventure story on a macroscopic scale.