Science Fiction, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday: The Quantum Rose Is a Fascinating Hard SF Romance

quantumIf you’re seeking a shining example of the ephemeral nature of pop culture, look to the phenomenon of art that wins accolades and awards upon release, and then almost completely disappears from the zeitgeist. Consider the films that have won Best Picture Oscars—there will undoubtedly be a few that surprise you, simply because they have so thoroughly disappeared from the public consciousness, even after only a few years (when was the last time you heard anyone talking about The Artist?).

The Quantum Rose

The Quantum Rose

Paperback $25.99

The Quantum Rose

By Catherine Asaro

Paperback $25.99

The same can be said for novels that win major awards, and a prime example might be Catherine Asaro’s The Quantum Rose, which won the 2001 Nebula Award for Best Novel. The Nebulas are a big deal, and the book was well-reviewed in general, yet a Google search of the title limited to mentions in the last year yields about 230 results; in comparison, Connie Willis’ Passage, also nominated that year, returns over 5,000 hits in a similar search, and we don’t need to discuss the pop culture presence of George R.R. Marin’s A Storm of Swords to solidify the point, do we? The Quantum Rose made a big splash and won a major sci-fi award, but today, it seems to have fallen behind the proverbial bookshelf.
And that’s a shame, because it’s a fantastic book.
Hard Sci-Fi Romance
At the time (and still today), many commented on Asaro’s mixture of hard science concepts (specifically, quantum scattering theory; the author has a Ph.D. in chemical physics) and “soft” science fiction and romance tropes. The book uses a Beauty and the Beast story as its basic structure: on a forgotten outpost world of a huge interplanetary empire, Kamoj Quanta Argali is contracted to marry Jax Ironbridge. The marriage will save her impoverished province, but Jax is well-known for his cruelty. She receives a stay of execution when a powerful, wealthy outlander named Havyrl Lionstar—a man rumored to come from beyond the planet, whose face is so ugly he wears a mask, and who commands ancient technologies that have passed into legend—claims her as his wife, saving her from an undoubtedly unhappy marriage, but thrusting her into an unknowable one.
The hard science underlying the story is fascinating and allegorical; the characters and plot represent aspects of physics theory. That means that you can enjoy it as a great story without paying a moment’s attention to the deeper meaning—or you can read Asaro’s essay on the subject included in the back of the book, and nurture a true appreciation for what she’s managed to pull off. If nothing else, overlaying a latticework of deep scientific thought with a capital-R fairy tale Romance is incredibly ambitious project. It’s easy to see why so many people were wowed back in 2001.
Rediscover a Great Novel
A books doesn’t win an award like the Nebula unless there’s something there. That’s not to say awards always get it right from a historical perspective (otherwise, Asaro’s honors would probably have gone to George R.R. Martin, given the number of readers who’ve plowed through A Storm of Swords), but to win an award, a book has to win hearts—and that’s no small feat. And while The Quantum Rose may not be your idea of hard science fiction, or romantic science fiction, or even your idea of those two things mixed liberally together, it is a novel of ideas that’s well worth rediscovering. For those who don’t think romance has any place in science fiction, it offers an incredibly rich, detailed universe (explored in many other standalone books within Asaro’s Saga of the Skolian Empire), with a complex history of squabbling empires and a fascinating, formerly matriarchal societal structure, augmented with plenty of fantastic SFnal concepts and technology.
In short, you owe it to yourself to check out this award-winning book. and then follow it up with Asaro’s other books in the series. The only possible downside: too many great novels to read.

The same can be said for novels that win major awards, and a prime example might be Catherine Asaro’s The Quantum Rose, which won the 2001 Nebula Award for Best Novel. The Nebulas are a big deal, and the book was well-reviewed in general, yet a Google search of the title limited to mentions in the last year yields about 230 results; in comparison, Connie Willis’ Passage, also nominated that year, returns over 5,000 hits in a similar search, and we don’t need to discuss the pop culture presence of George R.R. Marin’s A Storm of Swords to solidify the point, do we? The Quantum Rose made a big splash and won a major sci-fi award, but today, it seems to have fallen behind the proverbial bookshelf.
And that’s a shame, because it’s a fantastic book.
Hard Sci-Fi Romance
At the time (and still today), many commented on Asaro’s mixture of hard science concepts (specifically, quantum scattering theory; the author has a Ph.D. in chemical physics) and “soft” science fiction and romance tropes. The book uses a Beauty and the Beast story as its basic structure: on a forgotten outpost world of a huge interplanetary empire, Kamoj Quanta Argali is contracted to marry Jax Ironbridge. The marriage will save her impoverished province, but Jax is well-known for his cruelty. She receives a stay of execution when a powerful, wealthy outlander named Havyrl Lionstar—a man rumored to come from beyond the planet, whose face is so ugly he wears a mask, and who commands ancient technologies that have passed into legend—claims her as his wife, saving her from an undoubtedly unhappy marriage, but thrusting her into an unknowable one.
The hard science underlying the story is fascinating and allegorical; the characters and plot represent aspects of physics theory. That means that you can enjoy it as a great story without paying a moment’s attention to the deeper meaning—or you can read Asaro’s essay on the subject included in the back of the book, and nurture a true appreciation for what she’s managed to pull off. If nothing else, overlaying a latticework of deep scientific thought with a capital-R fairy tale Romance is incredibly ambitious project. It’s easy to see why so many people were wowed back in 2001.
Rediscover a Great Novel
A books doesn’t win an award like the Nebula unless there’s something there. That’s not to say awards always get it right from a historical perspective (otherwise, Asaro’s honors would probably have gone to George R.R. Martin, given the number of readers who’ve plowed through A Storm of Swords), but to win an award, a book has to win hearts—and that’s no small feat. And while The Quantum Rose may not be your idea of hard science fiction, or romantic science fiction, or even your idea of those two things mixed liberally together, it is a novel of ideas that’s well worth rediscovering. For those who don’t think romance has any place in science fiction, it offers an incredibly rich, detailed universe (explored in many other standalone books within Asaro’s Saga of the Skolian Empire), with a complex history of squabbling empires and a fascinating, formerly matriarchal societal structure, augmented with plenty of fantastic SFnal concepts and technology.
In short, you owe it to yourself to check out this award-winning book. and then follow it up with Asaro’s other books in the series. The only possible downside: too many great novels to read.