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Yukikaze (1984)

von Chōhei Kambayashi

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Reihen: Yukikaze (1)

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1347203,742 (3.56)3
A military scifi classic, by one of the modern masters of world science fiction. A military scifi classic, by one of the modern masters of world science fiction. Reads L to R (Western Style). More than thirty years ago, a hyper-dimensional passageway suddenly appeared over the continent of Antarctica. Fighters from the mysterious alien force known as the JAM poured through the passage, the first wave an attempted terrestrial invasion. Their ferocity was unquestionable, their aim unknown. Humanity, united by a common enemy, managed to repel the invaders, chasing them back through the passageway to the strange planet nicknamed “Fairy.” The task of finishing the battle was given to the newly formed FAF, a combat force created to go to Fairy and eliminate the JAM bases once and for all. Now, in the midst of a war with no end in sight, Second Lieutenant Rei Fukai carries out his missions in the skies over Fairy. Attached to Tactical Combat and Surveillance Unit 3 of the Special Air Force, his duty is to gather information on the enemy and bring it back to base—no matter the human cost. His only constant companion in this lonely task is his fighter plane, the sentient FFR-31 Super Sylph, call sign: Yukikaze.… (mehr)
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This book was not exactly what I expected it to be.

It contains some very dynamic air battles. Fans of Ace Combat out there, and Macross saga, know what to expect - wild maneuvering, guns blazing, high-G stress and alarms blaring indicating missile locks. But book is not just about that.

It gives a picture of remote battlefield - connected through a portal to Earth (way JAM invaders first attacked Earth) - that seems like a nightmare-induced battlefield (two suns with "bloody river" between them, weird flora and fauna, weird colors, everything seems so dreamy) where eternal war between humanity and JAM takes place. This planet, called Faery, is so deadly that combat only takes place in the air. While there are airports and bases, they are just ground targets - Faery's airspace is where actual combat takes place, there are no troops but flyers here. Weirdness of this place, multinational force from Earth (Faery Air Force) deployed there is akin to French Foreign Legion [all the problematic military personnel, with crime record or just unable to fit into standard forces are given chance to serve time on Faery and then go back to Earth with clean slate], which means expendable, all make this battlefield so remote to regular inhabitants of Earth, to the level of myth (after initial JAM attack on Earth years ago, there were no more combat actions on Earth, so everybody returned back to the inter-state squabbling). Every contact between Earth and Faery deployed personnel shows how different they have become, even linguistically they started to diverge. Earth-bound people are either worried that FAF is some deep state army preparing for conquering the Earth (you had to love that journalist chapter) or are just outright worried that personnel going to Faery to fight are losing what makes them human in the first place [state of never-ending war will strip people of the usual traits of society in peace time; Everything becomes tool for the war effort, and what cannot be used is then discarded; This usually means limited to no use of social traits that help build connections and relations and bring tension to low levels, for a simple reason that in war zone these traits usually mean quick death] and thus question arises what to do with veterans when they come back to Earth.
But book is not just about that.

Main antagonist in the book, JAM, are very extraordinary alien force. Nobody ever saw them, there is no communication with them, only physical manifestation are their strike craft and their bio-constructs they use in what might be considered psychological operations. JAM are main psychological difficulty to the FAF forces. If one cannot even visualize what they are fighting against, and since there is no communication one cannot gauge the progress of the campaign, all of the FAF's pilots and personnel in general are under unique and deadly form of stress. This pressure of never-ending war that needs to be fought (as author states, goal is to impede the progress of JAM, since no-one knows what would it take to actually win in this war) starts to create questions of need of human presence in combat airplanes, since every day combat has a feeling of industrialized carnage. Would it not be better to have machines fight it between themselves? Especially since JAM is viewed by most as machines - since humanity comes into contact only with JAM machines. This feeling of impeding doom as war just goes on and on, dehumanizes the FAF force, because what would ordinarily be standard human (re)actions (definition of victory/moral, seeking communication and diplomatic solution etc) just make no sense on Faery because JAM is just ..... unfathomable. This issue of first contact/conflict with alien species that cannot be comprehend by humans, is just one of the areas this book is about.

Through chapters we are given almost evolution-like development of Yukikaze fighter plane. What starts as a series of weird encounters and decisions by Yukikaze [and rest of automated systems on Faery] slowly escalates. Decisions to engage targets Yukikaze identifies as JAM although to humans they seem to be human fighters, weird personnel decisions (snow clearing team story was heart breaking) and almost total recklessness when it comes to human lives in case when fighter planes themselves are endangered - all of this slowly culminates to the point where it is visible that FAF computer systems have reached some level of intelligence, but unfortunately one that will just make them proficient in war against JAM. Everything else is of second nature and at first it seems that tools made by humanity have decided that humanity itself is impediment for most efficient use of tools in question. And it is not that machines have come to their conclusions on their own - everything originates from the actions and decisions of their human controllers that they have become masters of emulating (very good comment on teaching-bias). Is it weird that means justify the ends approach of FAF while fighting the JAM slowly becomes the mantra of ever more smarter weapon systems? Is it weird that these smarts systems start to take themselves to be on par with humans and as such always seek to ensure their own survival over anything else (even their teaches, humans)? All with the aim of defeating the JAM.

As can be seen topics in the book are all very interesting and very current (as is every story about the conflict). Author's style is very readable, there are no repetitions and wasted spaces, everything is very tight and to the point. Translator did excellent job in my opinion.
What might be a cause of contention is tempo of chapters. While there are adrenaline fueled chapters, some of them are slower than the others, sometimes imbued with internal monologues that might be boring to some (i.e. that snow team chapter, truly heartbreaking, but rather slow - not that I mind :)) or just anime/manga ... cringy (!?! in lack of better words) (that ace pilot testing latest FAF fighter and his love interest, constant tension between Rei and commanding officer). I know these elements are here for dramatic effect, but pacing gets affected nevertheless, and some readers might not like it.

Very interesting book, covers some very interesting subjects. I am now on lookout for the sequel :)

Highly recommended to fans of SF, aliens and of course good old mecha/fighter combat. ( )
  Zare | Apr 3, 2024 |
Story: 5.5 / 10
Characters: 5
Setting: 8
Prose: 6.5 ( )
  MXMLLN | Jan 12, 2024 |
A deceptive book, that starts out as a story about hot-shot pilots fighting an alien menace that turns into a meditation on war, humanity, and what enmity between humans and nonhumans might actually look like.

Fun, well translated, and fast paced military SF. ( )
  JimDR | Dec 7, 2022 |
Golden seal of approval. ( )
  bloodrizer | Nov 19, 2015 |
Not so much a story, but a story behind the story.

This is a translated copy, so I can't speak to the quality of the prose other than to say it was sufficiently invisible that the storytelling itself was not disrupted. As a Military Sc-Fi story there were technical passages on the nature of combat aircraft and flying. These made little sense to me, but I went with the mood and made up my own pictures in my head like a good reader should :->

This novel covers the war between humans and invading aliens that takes place on the staging planet of Faery. Through the eyes of combat pilot Rei, the story covers the nature of humanity. As the arms race between to two civilisations escalates, technology takes over pushing humanity further into obsolescence. Humans and Aliens themselves struggle to perceive each other, and most of the interaction between species takes place through their technologies. as further contrast, Rei himself is one of a specially selected few pilots chosen for his cool detached emotions and ability to observe the bloodshed from a distance in a surveillance only role. Rei's strongest connection is with his technically advanced fighter plane Yukikaze, which he personifies in his mind more a lover than machine. It is through this relationship that he questions the nature of humanity.

The novel is split into sections, each section dealing with a specific scenario, and one that is not touched upon in other sections. This was somewhat frustrating when revelations are not built upon and further explored - more like reading series of short stories than a A to B narrative. Each section does advance the overall narrative of the war, but it felt more like a series of manga episodes strung together. An interesting approach, but one which took some getting used to.
Like I said, the real story is more the arc behind the story as the technology supercedes humnaity and the basis of the war itself is questioned.

Despite the grand scale of the premise, it's actually a "closed room" type of story. There are very few characters and very few locations. The main protaganist of Rei is emotionally detached and the other great character is Yukikaze itself. The concepts are interesting but only ever scratch the surface, which was a shame.

The way Rei, increasingly emotionally isolated, shambles along against the background of a war remind me of the bleak mood of [b:The Forever War|21611|The Forever War (The Forever War, #1)|Joe Haldeman|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1386852511s/21611.jpg|423].


( )
  StaticBlaq | Apr 26, 2015 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (1 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Kambayashi, ChōheiAutorHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Nadelman, NeilÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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A military scifi classic, by one of the modern masters of world science fiction. A military scifi classic, by one of the modern masters of world science fiction. Reads L to R (Western Style). More than thirty years ago, a hyper-dimensional passageway suddenly appeared over the continent of Antarctica. Fighters from the mysterious alien force known as the JAM poured through the passage, the first wave an attempted terrestrial invasion. Their ferocity was unquestionable, their aim unknown. Humanity, united by a common enemy, managed to repel the invaders, chasing them back through the passageway to the strange planet nicknamed “Fairy.” The task of finishing the battle was given to the newly formed FAF, a combat force created to go to Fairy and eliminate the JAM bases once and for all. Now, in the midst of a war with no end in sight, Second Lieutenant Rei Fukai carries out his missions in the skies over Fairy. Attached to Tactical Combat and Surveillance Unit 3 of the Special Air Force, his duty is to gather information on the enemy and bring it back to base—no matter the human cost. His only constant companion in this lonely task is his fighter plane, the sentient FFR-31 Super Sylph, call sign: Yukikaze.

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