cover image Trapped in the R.A.W.

Trapped in the R.A.W.

Kate Boyes. Aqueduct, $20 trade paper (312p) ISBN 978-1-61976-159-9

Boyes’s metafictional SF debut convincingly depicts the tenacity of the human spirit in the face of uncertainty. Kaylee is a special collections librarian who’s trapped in the university’s rare books library when aliens invade Earth. She records her thoughts on the pages of old library books, musing about the deteriorating state of the world while making a desperate bid for survival. Even though the invaders destroy her home and those she loves, Kaylee wishes to learn more about them, and forges a relationship with a male of the invading species while attempting to rationalize their destruction of humankind. With her new ally by her side, Kaylee plans her escape from the library, leaving her journal behind. Some 30 years after the invasion, the journal is picked up by a human expeditionary force, and the missing pieces of Kaylee’s story begin to fall into place. Kaylee is undeniably charming; Boyes suffuses her diaries with both humor and weight. Boyes’s attention to detail carries the tale forward, drawing the reader into Kaylee’s journey of survival and discovery. Although the interspecies romance is hackneyed, Boyes does differentiate her aliens from both typical Star Trek–style humanoids and the bug-eyed monsters of the pulps. Apocalyptic fiction fans will enjoy this intriguing take on the genre. (July)