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Edward Ringel
Author
The Strange Tale of the Trilobite Liberation Army
The incredible story first chronicled in “I Look Forward to Further Collaboration Between Our Species” continues. Our Latternite alien friends came in peace. They wanted to trade ideas, culture, and technology and be our BFFs. A year into it, though, and it still ain’t happening. Not a whole lot of anything is being exchanged, brainsucking kleptrons are still out there wreaking havoc, and everybody within 25 light-years of the mess is getting frustrated and impatient. Worst of all, the law of unintended consequences proves again to be the most powerful force of nature, as one attempted remedy after another doesn’t work out quite as expected. Even the TLA, the vaunted Trilobite Liberation Army, can’t seem to make it right. Or can they?
Reviews
This brisk, funny science-fiction head-spinner, Ringel’s follow up to I Look Forward to Further Collaboration Between Our Species, blends an ongoing future-Earth first-contact story with playful, sometimes biting satire and a commitment to both science itself and all that’s worth loving in our civilization, like pizza and British TV mystery procedurals. The story is a continuation, but new readers should have no trouble jumping right into the madness as, a year after encountering aliens from the planet Lattern, the Earth of the 22nd century faces an unexpected consequence: humans’ abuse of Kleptrons, dragonfly-like brain suckers from Lattern who, given the chance to penetrate a human skull, will rouse a person to brief, intense pleasure while feeding on their memories.

People being people, stolen Kleptrons are being put to nefarious ends. The story kicks off with Latternian biobots’ cockeyed solution: introduce to Earth the bioengineered predator that handled Kleptrons on Lattern. Unfortunately, these Flektanians turn out to be “meter-long creatures that look remarkably like dung beetles.” Complicating matters, as they help Maine doctors Ed and Helen Gilner track down Kleptrons, the Flektanians spit out radical speeches about resurrecting the reign of the trilobites, even vowing “to make arthropods great again.” As that suggests, Ringel’s satire edges at times toward the wacky, but like all good conjurers of speculative fiction his world is internally consistent, no matter how off-beat. Nothing here is scattershot, and despite the silly stuff the novel offers a smart, twisty investigation of how the powers that be use Kleptrons, complete with insights into 22nd century American politics and business.

The science, too, is dead serious despite the fun. The crisply told narrative, spiked with sharp comic dialogue and diplomatic crises, builds to real surprises and thoughtful ideas, demonstrating in the end that “A civilization's understanding of theoretical physics is far and away the best indicator of its overall maturity.” Ringel’s own blend of maturity and its opposite is idiosyncratic, but lovers of oddball comic SF will be on board.

Takeaway: Truly funny science-fiction satire, alive with ideas and fun.

Comparable Titles: Keith Laumer, Robert Sheckley.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: B+

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