Radiant Star by Ann Leckie
Thursday, May 14, 2026 at 9:17AM 
Published by Orbit on May 12, 2026
Ann Leckie fries the brains of science fiction fans who refuse to grow up and understand that the genre is not frozen in the 1950s. Science fiction demands that readers open their imagination to possibilities. A small but vocal group of sf readers are particularly angry at Leckie because, in Ancillary Justice, she imagined a future in which the dominant power (the Radch empire) uses only the pronoun “she” to refer to humans. The use of female pronouns regardless of actual gender freaked out some narrow-minded readers, although they would have been fine with the universal use of male pronouns. Those readers, I suggest, need to get over themselves. As Leckie explicitly narrates near the end of Radiant Star, gender alone does not define a person. At the same time, the right of individuals to define their own gender may be central to personal autonomy.
Radiant Star is set in the same universe as, but tells a smaller story than, the Ancillary Justice trilogy. Leckie begins Radiant Star by explaining that, “though Ooioiaan boys may grow up to be any gender one may care to imagine, for the boys of the Consorority of the Translocation there are only those two options available” — and it is up to the family matriarch to choose for them. Those who seem best suited to the role become consorors (hence women) while those who grow up to be men become “servants and minor household administrators.” However, they are particularly capable servants and much in demand among the Ooioiaan. That role reversal — a society that values female over male, that relegates males to a role of servitude — is guaranteed to cheese off Leckie’s haters. Again.
Much of Radiant Star is devoted to world building. Ooioiaa is an underground city in the planet Aaa. It is also the planet’s only city. The surface of Aaa is intolerably cold, but below a sheet of ice, unusual creatures exist in Aaa’s waters. Hardy creates that will eat almost anything exist on the surface. The planet moves through space on a path that rarely brings it near a star, much less the star that its inhabitants worship. Leckie details the history of Ooioiaa, Aaa’s food production and life forms, the religion that arose in service of the Radiant Star, the various rooms in the Site of the Temporal Location of the Radiant Star, the evolution of religiuos imagery over time, the competition between sects, the hierarchy of Ooioiaa’s rulers, the elevation of saints, how the difference between “she” and “sie” affects perceptions of the person to whom the pronoun refers, and water treatment systems, among other subjects. Worlds are rarely built as completely as those that Leckie constructs.
Ooioiaa is governed by the Radchaii. For reasons that earlier novels explain, the gate that connects Aaa to other star systems has stopped functioning, cutting off communication between Governor Charak and her Radchaii masters. Since the human residents of Ooioiaa depend on the Radchaii for their food supply, they will soon experience a food shortage. The shortage is compounded by a failed experiment to grow a food called skel in Aaa’s waters. Skel is favored by the Radchaii and will sustain humans, although humans much prefer peas and pucks as well as onions. Skel fouls Ooioiaa’s water supply and leads to contamination of the few crops that can be grown on Aaa. Radiant Star eventually becomes the story of a city in crisis, a story that might be seen as illustrating the famine experienced in countries like Eritrea (or Ireland during the Great Famine), expanded to an extinction level.
The complicated story follows several characters whose lives are characterized by drama. Serque Tais would like to become a saint, a process that requires taking up permanent residence in the Site of the Temporal Location of the Radiant Star, where saints enter a state that might not be death but bears little resemblance to life. His son, Serque Iono, conspires to become Serque Removal after Serque Tais is gone, a powerful position that Tais intends to bequeath to his grandchild, Elerit (pronoun “per”).
Society frowns on Shtel, Iono’s chosen consort, because “hir appearance, accent, and manners lacked (everyone agreed) a certain polish, and were very obviously a thin veneer that could not entirely cover hir essential boorishness.” Shtel is loyal to Iono but she occupies a woeful position when Ooioiaa turns against him.
Zaved toured other star systems and came back pregnant. She had run low on money and, for a price, agreed that her son Jonr would be raised for servitude and sold to his buyer upon reaching adulthood. Thirty years later, Zaved has become a consoror and the matriarch of the Translocationists. Her plan for Jonr doesn’t work out well for either of them.
Governor Charak is no fan of saints (or humans, for that matter) but his more immediate problem is the riot that breaks out as Tais is transported to the Site of the Temporal Location. Charak does a lousy job of managing the food crisis, not to mention the life form on the planet’s surface that seems to be eating the port that serves as the main entrance to the Ooioiaa. The novel has something to say about autocratic governance and the inevitable tendency of humans to prefer making their own decisions, for better or worse.
The plot is an assemblage of small stories rather than the overarching story told in the Ancillary Justice trilogy. While there is less action than readers might expect after reading the trilogy, Radiant Star generates a satisfying amount of tension. Leckie deftly juggles the characters and their stories and, by the end, ties them into a satisfying knot. The world building might get in the story’s way at times, but Leckie’s creation of the universe in which the characters dwell would have sustained my interest even if there had been no plot at all.
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