Title: Contact Imminent Author: Kristine Smith Year: 2003 Publisher: Harper-Collins Reviewer: Jake Beal I always like it when a sequel is capable of standing on its own. I picked up the fourth book in Ms. Smith's series---I've seen the others on the shelf quite a number of times, but never got more than a few pages into any of them. No particular reason, they just didn't grab me right off and I wasn't lacking for reading material at the time. For some reason, "Contact Imminent" looked more interesting, and I after I'd sunk my teeth in, I started appreciating it and enjoyed the story. As stated, it stands on its own, despite having a well developed alien race with a near-human-but-not-human psychology. There's a lot of material packed into momentary asides, and the book is focussed on the culture clash between "humanish" and the idomeni aliens, so the reader gets briefed by a thousand little one-line toss-off arguments, like Colonel Pierce arguing that his cigarettes don't break the visible food taboo of the idomeni. And I guess that's like what real people do. We don't have struggles that just stop when they're done, they echo and rebound and people keep talking about them afterwards. The world does, however, revolve around the heroine. Jani Kilian is at the center of everything, and always ends up in the middle of the action even when she should be hunkered down in a bunker somewhere. Just at the critical time, she'll get it into her head that she should be involved in the action and bingo, she walks out and gets to observe and perhaps play a critical role. Strange, exotic, the first hybrid between humans and idomeni, she is fought over by all the men in the story and always knows the right thing to do next. She never makes a mistake throughout the story, except once toward the end when it's necessary for her to be present at a dramatic moment. I don't think she's actually a Mary Sue---a manifestation of the author's ego---I think she's just the heroic focus that everything revolves around. Oh, there's a few other viewpoints that show up in the story as well, but it's the Jani Kilian show from start to finish. I found myself thinking of C.J. Cherryh's "Foreigner" series as I read this book. The similarities are clear---the strong central character, the oppressive and murky politics of the interface between species, the not-quite-human psychology of the aliens. Ms. Cherryh, however, has a much stronger characterization of the alien nature of the aliens, and the unexpected differences in psychology that can keep leaping up and biting her characters, whereas Ms. Smith is much more interested in the idea of fusion between the two identities---and for that they need to be fundamentally compatible. Ms. Smith explores the ideas some, but in the end her heroine is too heroic to make for a very interesting discussion. I notice that I'm talking about this book as though I didn't like it, and that's not really true. It's a fine book, but it just didn't leave much of a mark on me. I suppose I would liken it to any potboiler adventure novel---partway through, you already know most of what's going to happen in the book, and there's no need to rush through to find out. You can pick it up, read a dozen more pages of political intrigue, lover's quarrels, and alien religion, and then you can set it down again and come back later. A pretty good book, but no new ground.