
Longer
by Michael Blumlein
Genres: Science FictionPages: 240
Rating:
Synopsis:In Longer, Michael Blumlein explores dauntingly epic topics--love, the expanse of the human lifespan, mortality--with a beautifully sharp story that glows with grace and good humor even as it forces us to confront deep, universal fears.
Gunjita and Cav are in orbit.
R&D scientists for pharmaceutical giant Gleem Galactic, they are wealthy enough to participate in rejuvenation: rebooting themselves from old age to jump their bodies back to their twenties. You get two chances. There can never be a third.
After Gunjita has juved for the second and final time and Cav has not, questions of life, death, morality, and test their relationship. Up among the stars, the research possibilities are infinite and first contact is possible, but their marriage may not survive the challenge.
I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
I remember trying Michael Blumlein’s Longer previously and bouncing off it, but I couldn’t really remember why (and what I did seem to remember didn’t really match what I read now, so maybe I’m mistaken). So I figured now I’d give it a proper shot. There are some interesting ideas here — the consequences of a (limited, but extended) long life, the possibility of some kind of extraterrestrial life (with, in the background, the aftermath of a hoax about the same), a developing mismatch between people who’ve lived together for a long time.
Buuut it reaches way too hard for profundity, trying to write in a stripped-back way to give it gravity, and thus stripping it also of personality and emotion. For something that’s really heavy on dialogue (multiple exchanges without any inquits to note who is speaking, what they’re doing as they speak, their tone, etc) it’s really bad at differentiating the characters from one another. In one exchange I carefully counted it out so I could figure out who was saying what, and one character must have had two lines in a row at one point (which is something you have to be really careful of when you do that).
The footnotes didn’t really add anything either; it didn’t feel like it was meant to be an in-world document, so why in-world footnotes? Did the author just fail to think of a way to get vital information into the narrative? But the footnotes didn’t really give vital information in any way, just extra flavour (such as it was).
Overall, kinda bland and boring, unfortunately. It isn’t really digging into the sci-fi concepts for the cool sci-fi nature, but more a philosophic take on the potential impact of longevity treatments. There’s a place for that, but I didn’t find this effort at it particularly interesting or fun to read.
Rating: 1/5 (“didn’t like it”)






























