Seventeen year old Amy joins her
parents on a inter-galactical colonisation mission to Alpha Centauri. While her
parents are essential to the future of the colony, Amy is listed in the
manifest as ‘non-essential cargo’. Cryogenically frozen (and the book goes into
quite uncomfortably detailed descriptions about what this might feel like), the
colonists are loaded aboard ‘Godspeed’ for the 300-year voyage, with the
spaceship manned by workers who, over the generations, will tend the vessel and
the precious cargo.
Amy begins to awaken. Are we
there yet? Embedded in her cryogenic soup, she begins to drown, but is rescued
by a quick-thinking worker. But Amy’s journey is just beginning. Someone is
unplugging the colonists and allowing them to die. Fifty years before the
voyage is due to end, Amy finds herself stranded alone in a world that has long
forgotten her and everyone and everything that she remembers – with a murderer
on board. It is utterly chilling.
Revis portrays the claustrophobic
and incestuous atmosphere aboard ‘Godspeed’ extremely well and the desperation
of Amy in trying to adjust to her new life. There is no grass, only something
that looks like it. There is no sun, only a bright light that sort of looks a
bit sunnish but not really. The food looks familiar but doesn’t taste the same.
The animals look like animals back on Earth, but don’t behave like them. She
wants nothing more than to unplug her parents and to have someone or something
familiar to clutch hold of – but her parents are vital to the future of the
colony and she needs to protect them against whoever is killing the space
travellers.
Of course, it’s also a love
story. Each generation (bred at precise intervals and injected with
DNA-enhancing genes to overcome the dangers of inbreeding) has a leader –
Elder. Amy is so different – among an entire spaceship of people who look the
same, she alone has pale skin and ‘sunset hair’. She’s a freak and is shunned,
but Elder is entranced. With the help of rebels on board, Amy and Elder defy
the dangerously omnipotent hierarchy to discover the secrets aboard the
‘Godspeed’ – who is killing the colonists and why, and why isn’t the ship
getting any closer to its final destination.
This is a book written for teens,
but very entertaining and suspenseful. Revis creates a very realistic picture
of life aboard the ship and the secrets and dangers that must be overcome.
Di