![]() “It’s perhaps difficult,” one character says to Leigh at one point, “to really face this certainly it’s difficult to do the idea justice.” I agree with them. The novel as a whole embodies the principle that it isn’t just our personal history that locks us into spiralling feedback loops: our planetary history does too, and awareness of this is part of what makes daily living in the Anthropocene feel, you might say, so very strange. It’s there in the sponsorship of Leigh’s oceanic exploration, in the design of the spaceship she ultimately helps to create, in the protests against that mission by environmental activists, in Helena’s later life in Indonesia. ![]() So another tension, between capitalist development and environmental management, is there from the start, and as the narrative elaborates, it becomes another complicating background hum. Unfortunately, in the twenty-first century it is no longer predictable work, and this intolerable fact drives Geert to dark places. We are told how Rotterdam’s skyline has come to resemble that of Manhattan, “a forest of steel, chrome and glass,” but also how contingent its existence is on Geert’s continued work. The first chapter is a meditation on the work of Leigh and Helena’s father, Geert, a hydraulic engineer maintaining the Netherlands’ polders. What finally elevates In Ascension, however, and I think likely makes it one of the best science fiction novels of the year, is how deftly these concerns are embedded in a ruthlessly contemporary depiction of an international, ecological near future. “The state attained remains meaningful.” It serves as a comment on the whole novel. “It’s an artificial route to the transcendent, but it doesn’t undermine it,” he argues. Discussing neurological experiments on humans that induce feelings of transcendence, Leigh insists that they represent “a cheat code for God,” and are therefore meaningless her colleague, who is a believer, disagrees. Yet the final mission she undertakes is explicitly Clarkean, a voyage to the very edge of the solar system and to contact with the unknown, related with a sincere belief in both the technical and the cosmological. Her inner space is one of the novel’s important territories, and her work on microbial life becomes an obsessional gravity well around which her consciousness circles. In her analytical detachment, Leigh is a more than somewhat Ballardian protagonist. That tension, in fact, might be read as an attempt to reconcile two venerable SF traditions. MacInnes expertly manages the resulting tension between the intimate and the abstract, making In Ascension an uneasy read even when it seems to be at its most straightforward. “Every time I tried to push my past into insignificance I only committed to it further,” she laments. Throughout all of it the demands of her family relationships are a constant thrum distracting from the science-fictional excitements. Still later, she becomes a crew member for a specific mission. Later, Leigh’s work investigating algal crops as a potential food source leads to the top-secret project mentioned above, a position with the multilateral Institute for Coordinated Research in Space that is planning long-term space missions to exploit a breakthrough in propulsion technology. In the early part of the novel, when Leigh is in the final year of her doctorate in marine biology, she takes a position on a commercial expedition prospecting the Atlantic seafloor it discovers an anomaly that appears to go deeper than the Mariana Trench. Yet it is Leigh who is the primary narrator of In Ascension, and the projects she is involved in that occupy most of its page count. It is, for instance, Helena who, much later in their lives, arranges for the care of their ailing mother, Fenna, while Leigh has locked herself away on a top-secret research project. In fact, for much of their lives, Helena feels that she has been the grown-up in their relationship, a grounded counterpoint to Leigh’s solipsistic intellectual fascinations. ![]() And then it stops.” It is the only incident Helena can remember in which Leigh took advantage of her firstborn status and greater physical stature in that way. “They are spiralling away together, into a different reality. “The moment stretches on, three, four seconds in suspension.” Helena becomes scared: she can’t breathe, fearful of what her sister is going to do. Leigh doesn’t want to go, and “gently, softly,” she grabs Helena and lifts her off the ground. It’s the end of a long summer day, and Helena is sent to call Leigh home for dinner. Towards the end of Martin MacInnes’s cerebral third novel, Helena Hasenbosch recalls a moment shared with her older sister Leigh, when they were children.
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