Demeter is the primary AI for a ship that transports passengers between Earth and Alpha Centauri. Demeter "awakens" as she approaches her destination to discover two disquieting pieces of information: 1) she has been offline and has no idea who turned her off, why, or for how long; 2) all of the humans aboard, passengers and crew, are dead—she has no idea how/why this has happened. When she docks, something, because she knows there is no one alive onboard, hacks an airlock. While Demeter can see nothing on her cameras, the humans on the space station report seeing a large dog run off the ship. And when Demeter checks, the code used to hack the airlock included the name "Dracula."
Over the next few years, and subsequent interstellar trips, Demeter encounters a werewolf, a group of Eldritch horrors, a mummy, and a version of the Frankenstein monster. Some are friendly. Some are most definitely not. But it becomes clear that for Demeter to avoid decommission and being branded a monster herself, she is going to have to find and confront Dracula.
This book was a surprise in oh so many ways. I discovered it in a local bookstore, recommended by the staff. I read the title and then read the description on the back. My immediate thought was that there was no way this premise would work and that this book would either be terrible or marvelous; there were really no other options, because the idea of classic monsters on a space cruiser really shouldn’t work. And yet, Truelove makes it work. She pays homage to the classic monster movies and sci-fi novels of the past that inspired her while bringing these tropes into the 21st century and creating something marvelous and new. Truelove really seems to know her stuff regarding both parts of the dichotomy. She easily references the different mechanical, programming, and engineering challenges involved with interstellar travel, sprinkles her marvelous prose with references to monster lore, and poses new questions that horror fans have rarely, if ever, had to consider (how does moonlight affect a werewolf in space when the moon is always full?).
One of the places where Truelove really shines is the relationship between Demeter and Steward, the ship’s medical AI. The differences in their functions leave each system with abilities and programming that the other lacks, making them reliant on each other, which neither system relishes. The result is sharp and witty banter that would rival a Preston Sturges romantic comedy or an episode of Gilmore Girls.
While Of Monsters & Mainframes touches on some serious issues, found family, scientific ethics, our responsibilities to ourselves and those we care about, it seems clear that Truelove was having a great deal of fun while she was writing her novel and wanted readers to have fun reading it. And she has succeeded brilliantly. Of Monsters & Mainframes is my favorite book of the year, and I simply can’t recommend it enough.
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