Wil McCarthy combines two branches of speculative thinking - space travel and biotechnology - to create a chilling and entirely believable future, as Bloom pits humankind against an enemy of its own creation, now rampantly out of control. In the late 21st century, manmade self-replicating organisms, smaller than the tiniest bacteria, have mutated and swept across the planet, spreading so swiftly that there is no time to do anything but flee and watch the Earth - and then the whole inner Solar System - literally consumed and incorporated into the entity known as the Mycosystem. A few years later, the remnants of humanity cling to existence in the asteroid belt and the moons of Jupiter, fighting off the spread of the Mycosystem while they work feverishly to build a starship to carry them to safety. Then they discover that the Mycosystem is mutating in a way which may soon endanger them again. The only way to be sure is for volunteers to journey into the heart of the Mycosyste m, a realm from which no one has ever returned.
Industry Reviews
By the early 22nd century, artificially created life-forms - mycora - that can dissolve stone, metal, flesh, anything, with terrifying speed, have taken over the Earth, the Moon, and Venus; the only human survivors cower behind biological barriers far away in the asteroids (the Gladholders) or the moons of Jupiter and Saturn (the Immunity). The dissenting Temples of Transcendent Evolution, however, admire the Mycosystem and are seeking ways to study it, perhaps even cooperate with it, an idea rejected as impossible by the Immunity's chief scientist, Vaclav Lottick. Instead, Lottick prepares a spaceship with novel defenses to probe the Mycosystem and set detectors down on Mars and Earth's polar regions, where, for some reason, the mycora can't flourish. But the Gladholders report humans living, apparently normally, on both Venus and Earth, so maybe the Temples are correct. Eventually the ship, captained by Darren Wallich and with journalist and narrator John Strasheim aboard, gets under way, but not before it's been attacked by spore-bearing Temple fanatics. And soon Strasheim discovers an eavesdropping device aboard - but who's listening? One of the crew turns out to be a Temple agent, but the others bundle her out of the airlock just before the spores she carries internally can explode into a deadly bloom. Pursued by a fleet of Temple ships, Wallich heads for Earth, only to discover that the detectors he's supposed to plant are actually bombs. Finally, the Mycosystem attacks the ship - or is it some weird attempt to communicate? Despite some conceptual problems, an ingenious yarn with challenging ideas, well-handled technical details and plenty of twists and turns: a whopping improvement on Murder in the Solid State (1996), though the sophomoric narrative voice is dismayingly similar. (Kirkus Reviews)