A love out of time. A spaceship built of secrets and murder.
Seventeen-year-old Amy joins her parents as frozen cargo aboard the vast spaceship Godspeed and expects to awaken on a new planet, three hundred years in the future. Never could she have known that her frozen slumber would come to an end fifty years too soon and that she would be thrust into the brave new world of a spaceship that lives by its own rules.
Amy quickly realizes that her awakening was no mere computer malfunction. Someone-one of the few thousand inhabitants of the spaceship-tried to kill her. And if Amy doesn't do something soon, her parents will be next.
Now Amy must race to unlock Godspeed's hidden secrets. But out of her list of murder suspects, there's only one who matters: Elder, the future leader of the ship and the love she could never have seen coming.
Review (with spoilers):
I was excited to read Across The Universe because not only did the synopsis promise an amazing story inside but I'd read a lot of great reviews for it and thus knew that a lot of people liked it and therefore, there would be a strong likelihood that I would too.
I enjoy sci-fi and watching Star Trek. Alas, I didn’t enjoy Across The Universe for the most part. I’ve read Across The Universe can be read by people who don’t necessarily read or enjoy sci-fi but the story left me with a lot of questions.
Technology
The beginning was interesting as Amy makes the decision to go with her parents (in a cryogenic state) on a journey to another planet that would take 300 years to complete. The process of Amy and her parents being put into stasis was very detailed, however Revis had not explained why they were leaving Earth in the first place and I believe that this was an essential piece of information that was overlooked.
Nothing major like an apocalypse could have taken place as Amy wondered about how Jason (her boyfriend) had probably got married and had children and now, 300 + 1 years later, his descendants would be alive on Earth. Furthermore, I wanted to know when the probe that was originally sent to the destination planet left Earth and when (if ever) it came back as Godspeed left in 2036. Shouldn’t the probe have been able to detect signs of life? Additionally, I wanted to know how many light years away the destination planet was meant to be as this is the first thing one should ask when travelling on a space ship.
While the description of how they were put into stasis was thorough, I wasn’t given the reason for why tubes were pushed down their throats. I thought it was because they couldn’t breathe the blue liquid in, but it turned out that they had to breathe that in anyway. Furthermore, though they put eye drops in so they wouldn’t go blind, they didn’t put anything in their ears so they wouldn’t go deaf. Also, how was Amy able to hear through the ice whilst in stasis as the ice would have covered her ears?
The reason for why the ship left a year late was not explained. Nonetheless, human cargo should be put on last. The cryochamber should have had more failsafe devices as there was only one alarm for all the chambers. When the temperature of the frozen person rises, the lid should open automatically so they don’t drown. These felt like grave technological oversights. Amy was pushing at the lid of her chamber when she woke up, but realistically, her muscles wouldn’t have been working properly to even lift her arms.
In truth, the ship had been travelling for more than 450 years, so the cryochambers would have broken down as they were made for a journey lasting 300 years. The question of how many chambers were there in total wasn’t answered. How did the Doctor (and the previous doctors) maintain all of them and repair them if they broke as there would only be a certain amount of spare parts in stock.
There was some interesting technology mentioned in Across The Universe such as grav tubes (similar to elevators but the person needs to be connected to the wi-com system) and floppies- slim, handheld computers. I was surprised there wasn’t better CCTV on board and especially in the cryochamber level. The explanation for how the ship had functioned for so long was that renewable fuel was being used but it didn’t go any deeper than that.
Just before they were cryogenically frozen, Amy’s father gave her the option of remaining on Earth and told her he didn’t think she would come with them. Amy was torn but decided to follow her parents, however, the reader later learns that she didn’t have a packed trunk. For 301 years they took an empty trunk that could have been filled with educational books or other essential equipment.
Content
There were some scenes of a sexual nature which were very graphic and explicit. There were also mentions of incest and some violence. There was nudity and suicide. Amy was the victim of attempted rape which was one of the most shocking moments in the book. As can be seen, Revis deals with some tough and sensitive subjects. However, the one thing that is altered is the swearing, as can be seen from the use of ‘Frex.’
Elder
I grew frustrated of Elder as the story went on; this was mostly due to his ignorance. Throughout the entirety of the book, Elder has only one lesson with Eldest and that is to find the three causes of discord- difference, lack of a strong central leader and finally, at the end of the book he is told the third one- individual thought. Just because Eldest didn’t like him or trust him, didn’t mean that Elder couldn’t have been more forceful in asking for lessons. If he was going to be the next leader, he needed to be educated.
Perhaps the most unbelievable thing was that he didn’t even know the date of when the Plague had happened. Elder admitted to Amy that Eldest had told him about the Plague but that he didn’t know when it had happened. I found this strange because the first question someone asks about an event that happened in the past, is when it happened. If Elder didn’t even know the date of the one significant event that had taken place on Godspeed, I didn’t think he could be a leader.
I found the romance side to be quite dull. As soon as he sees Amy, Elder was enamoured with her. He lusted after her a lot and described her ‘sunset’ hair increasingly as the story went on and this became tedious to read. It seemed like it would become a love triangle with the introduction of Harley, but Amy and Elder were too wrapped up in each other to even notice him sinking into depression.
What annoyed me was when Elder berated Harley for looking at the stars and not keeping watch of the frozens when he, himself hadn’t even taken a watch (actually, Elder doesn’t take a watch until very near the end of the book. Amy didn’t take a watch at all even though she constantly worried over whether her parents were being murdered at that moment).
When Elder does finally take a watch over the frozens, he goes to sleep immediately in front of the elevator which defeated the purpose of a ‘watch’. The straw that broke the camel’s back was that Harley and Elder took their watches without a weapon at hand. They were trying to catch a murderer and they weren’t even armed. What was Harley going to do with only a paint brush? Paint the murderer to death? Why did Elder think the murderer would be scared of him if he saw him sleeping there? They wouldn’t be.
I’d figured out who the murderer was long before it unfolded in the story so it wasn’t a surprise. The list of suspects wasn’t that long. There should have been a few more red herrings thrown in. I realised who the ‘middle’ elder was as well; Orion. As I said, there weren’t many characters to pick from. What I found strange was that Eldest and Doc had never seen the middle elder once in sixteen years, even though he was just there, in the recorder hall. Eldest kept saying he was the leader of the ship, yet he didn’t even know who was running the recorder hall.
All my uses of Elder, Eldest and middle Elder in this review sounds complicated as it’s hard to tell who is who. In Across The Universe, Elder/Eldest are not differentiated from each other in any way, not even by numbers, thus making everything that much more complicated. It’s not even known how many Eldests there have been. Also, it would be very hard to talk about them. The only other Eldest they discussed was the ‘Plague Eldest’, but what was the one after him called? Or the one after that one?
At the end of the book, Elder tells Amy that he unplugged her. I knew that this had been a strong possibility. By this point, I had realised that Elder was as bad as Eldest and the middle Elder. This is because Eldest was prepared to kill people if it suited his purposes and he drugged the populace into submission. Middle Elder callously killed frozens and calmly killed Eldest.
Elder too killed the middle Elder as it suited his purposes. He killed him just when middle Elder was about to reveal to Amy that Elder had unplugged her. Though it was said that he may still be alive, in my opinion, the chances of that would be very slim as he wasn’t prepped at all; the tubes weren’t down his throat, the eye drops hadn’t been put in and so on. He cannot be brought back from that totally unharmed.
When reading, I asked myself why Eldest and Elder would have the same access clearance. I understand that they’re clones and thus have the same DNA but logically, Eldest would have clearance for some of the more top secret information that he wouldn’t want Elder to know. It would have been pretty easy to use voice recognition software instead of fingerprints as their voices are not the same.
Amy
I liked Amy to begin with but as the story went on I felt that she was slow to figure out what was going on and to find the link between the victims which was pretty obvious. At the end, she doesn’t figure out that Steela is going to be killed until after it happens. Also, I didn’t know why she would put the information on her wall as anyone would be able to walk in and see it, including Eldest and Doc.
Though Eldest had threatened to kill her and hadn’t, he didn’t even confine her to her room, or to the Feeder Level. She was allowed to go wherever she pleased even though many of the populace weren’t allowed to. At the end, Amy states that she would correct Earth’s records but she doesn’t know enough to change much.
Other questions I had included:
• Why didn't Orion kill all the frozens at once rather than going around killing them one by one?
• Why would he mark his targets with red Xs as this would let everyone know his targets?
• Why did he pull all the trays out but not flick the switch? You would do it as you went along.
• How did Orion know they might be changed into slaves by the frozens once they reached the planet? And if Eldest told him, how did he know?
Overall, Across The Universe had an interesting premise which I was excited to read about. The pace was slow in the middle, but the beginning and end were good pace-wise. The story had a lot of potential in the beginning and the world Revis created was quite solid and unique. For me, the story picked up at the end but it was too late by then. It left me with a lot of questions. However, people will enjoy Across The Universe if they are looking for light sci-fi with a bit of mystery and romance.
Rating: 2.5/5
Concept: 4/5
Cover: 5/5