Blending elements of adventure SF with Chinese history and mythology, Hao follows a group of unlikely heroes as they attempt to avert two looming catastrophes: a war between adversarial superpowers and a botched first contact with benevolent aliens who could facilitate humankind’s next evolutionary step.
Set in 2080, the story begins when Jiang Liu, the rebellious youngest son of a politically powerful family and founder of the “world’s largest hacking collective,” is made aware of fluctuations in pulsar emission patterns near Earth. After attempting to meet with Yun Fan—an archeologist working in the Museum of the Mausoleum of Qin Shi Huang—Jiang Liu finds that Qi Fei, the head of a top-secret Chinese military research institute, is also looking to meet with the reclusive Yun Fan in search of answers to the cosmic questions. Yun Fan informs the two men—who obviously don’t trust each other—that a massive alien ship is approaching Earth and that her mission is to enter the ship. With the world’s two warring factions, the Pacific League and the Atlantic Alliance, desperately seeking to possess the alien ship’s secrets, Yun Fan and company enter the ship first—and find, among wonders beyond their wildest imaginations, that almost everything they knew about human history has been incorrect. The integration of Chinese history and myth throughout the narrative—the Terracotta Army buried with the first emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang; Confucianism; Daoism; fenghuang; qilin; and more—gives the narrative added depth. The themes explored, involving humankind’s violent and self-destructive tendencies, conclude with a glimmer of hope: “For all mankind to be one brotherhood is the grand dream of every great teacher in our history, and now we know it is also the article of faith of cosmic civilization.”
A deeply philosophical and thought-provoking story of humankind’s search for its destiny in the cosmos.