Kirkus Reviews QR Code
FOUND by Lesli Weber

FOUND

by Lesli Weber

Pub Date: Aug. 30th, 2024
ISBN: 9798218472634
Publisher: Sicilia Stories

Onetime Mars colonist Michelle Arensen, suddenly lost in deep space, finds herself in the custody of an intimidating alien race.

In humanity’s space-colonizing future, would-be Mars settler Michelle Arensen tries to put the suicide of her father behind her, working with her husband and brother to build a lasting Red Planet base. Suddenly, a bizarre phenomenon engulfs Michelle and other women on the expedition who find themselves held prisoner by faceless, noncommunicative humanoids. After a series of cruel, fatal medical experiments, the prisoners revolt. When Michelle awakens (a mystery narrative gap that author Weber wisely never fills in, letting the reader's imagination do the job), she has been revived after decades of drifting in space by a different extraterrestrial people. Her new hosts—or captors—are the Vinyi, bipeds with six principal limbs and easily twice the size of humans. Despite such a monstrous-by-human-standards physiognomy (“Grey skin. Tentacles. Tusks. Black eyes. Huge”), the Vinyi are not as nasty as the faceless creatures who killed Arensen’s co-workers (demonstrated when a shift in narrative voice takes readers into the minds of the crew of the Vinyi spaceship). Their discovery of Michelle is the first Vinyi contact with any species like Homo sapiens. Providentially, Michelle is a linguist. She adopts the Vinyi tongue and communicates her dilemma to them and learns Mars, Earth, and even the Milky Way are unknown to Vinyi civilization. The marooned hero must convince them she has worth and value as a sapient being, not just a lab specimen. The fast-paced plotline, conveyed in a direct, nonjargony prose (some may recall genre master Alan Dean Foster), has much in common with the “Robinsonade” type of SF, in which a resourceful human fights to navigate and survive a perilous alien environment. That this one is a dicey ship-board society and culture rather than a hostile planetary body makes author Weber's material more nuanced, and much weight is accorded to the emotional states of the players (human and nonhuman), even with a rather too-neat action wrap-up.

Aye, Captain, there is intelligent life in this involving SF adventure.