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Remnant Population by Elizabeth Moon
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Remnant Population (original 1996; edition 2000)

by Elizabeth Moon (Author)

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1,2384915,859 (3.89)110
When her company relocates to another planet, Ofelia Falfurrias, 70, who expects to be downsized anyway, decides to remain behind. Thus she discovers the planet's population as it emerges from hiding, now that the humans have left. A meeting of cultures.
Member:LisCarey
Title:Remnant Population
Authors:Elizabeth Moon (Author)
Info:Baen (2000), 368 pages
Collections:Your library, Currently reading, To read, Favorites
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Tags:f-sf

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Remnant Population by Elizabeth Moon (1996)

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» See also 110 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 49 (next | show all)
Great book. I loved the quiet domesticity of an old woman choosing to live by herself. I liked how she rediscovered herself away from society's recriminations. The garments she chose to make and wear, choosing her own pacing and activities. Then the aliens show up, and I also liked very much how they get to know each other, bonding over the common need to get away from the rain. I found the alien society very attractive, and I loved how they showed respect for old women. The ending is also satisfying. Overall, I'm very happy to read about an old woman as the protagonist and her ending up in a position of authority. ( )
  zjakkelien | Jan 2, 2024 |
Book club pick :)

What a great story this is… The best thing about the book is Ofelia, of course. I love the author for choosing the kind of person that is too often, too easily and unthinkingly dismissed, in so many societies (and not only in sci-fi books) – an elderly woman.

Ofelia, who has so many memories of grief and violence, who is used to surviving around people who walk all over her. Yet, there she is, finding new kinds of strength, a new inner voice, finding herself and freedom.

The writing has a flow that invites you along, and you immerse yourself in the story. I found myself caring more and more for Ofelia after just a few pages.

The aliens were wonderfully written – at first unknown and terrifying, and then hardly alien at all (to Ofelia, that is). I loved the scene where they made music together for the first time; I loved the process of learning about each other and forging a relationship, touches of humour, and the aliens’ POV.

I found the first contact team to be obnoxious and arrogant – grotesquely, perhaps, but not unbelievably so. Actually, I had to put the book away from time to time to calm down. Ofelia and her friends were wonderful in their courage and determination.

“It was impossible, it was all impossible, and she might as well get on with it. Impossible things didn’t get done by sitting around in the shade playing with children.”

The ending is lovely. ( )
  Alexandra_book_life | Dec 15, 2023 |
This book was recommended on a list of science fiction with non-standard protagonists. Unfortunately having an old woman as the protagonist was the only interesting aspect. A huge amount of time is spent on dull scenes explaining how an alien can say a word or operate a light switch. Every scene that isn't that kind of thing consists of the main character being 'disrespected' by every other human character. I'm guessing the author didn't mean to introduce 'unreliable narrator' vibes, but when literally not a single character is described positively by the protagonist you've got to assume that the protagonist is the one with the issue. This dynamic isn't explored in an interesting way, but instead laid out as a thin age discrimination polemic. ( )
  sarcher | May 6, 2023 |
This is a type of science fiction that would appeal to people who don't normally read scifi. It takes place in the future, on an unknown planet that had been colonized by some big bad corporation that was only interested in profits. The colonists more or less worked for the corporation, and when the corporation decided to abandon the colony, they just pulled everyone off, forcing them to leave their homes from the past decade or so, with no choice of what next.

But the main thrust of this book is not science or technology, it's the interaction between people, especially those who are not human, but perhaps more human than us in many ways. Certainly more humane.

The main character is a 70 year old woman who has a mind of her own, and follows her conscience finally instead of the established norm. She decided not to leave, but unfortunately didn't really have that choice, so she had to do it secretly, always afraid she'd be discovered. The important parts happen after she is finally discovered. ( )
  MartyFried | Oct 9, 2022 |
I am a big fan of fantasy and science fiction novels especially if they are long and have several books in the series. I really enjoy a series of books that I can immerse myself in and I first picked up an Elizabeth Moon novel because it was long and part of a multi-novel series. I continue to read her books because I find them engrossing and highly enjoyable. ( )
  KateKat11 | Sep 24, 2021 |
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» Add other authors (1 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Moon, Elizabethprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Hart, VanessaNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Ruddell, GaryCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Toren, SuzanneNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Dedication
To Betsy, who provided the spark,
And Mary, Ellen, and Carrie
who responded with warmth and light.
First words
Between her toes the damp earth felt cool, but already sweat crept between the roots of her hair.
Quotations
Always something to overcome the body's momentary collapse, if you only gave it a chance. A color, a scent, a scrap of music. (p. 194)
What they [instructors] cared about, all they really cared about, was that she learned to do what she was told and not make messes...had not cared whether she understood the machines she was taught to tend and repair. Follow the instructions...It's no harder than making a dress from a pattern, one of them told her. Even homemakers like you can do that. She had clenched herself around the pain of his scorn and proved that she could... (p.160)
The joy of creation, of play, had been the empty place unfilled by family and social duties. She would have loved her children better, she thought now, if she had realized how much she herself needed to play, to follow her own childish desire to handle beautiful things and make more beauty. (p 100)
It was the old guilt, which insisted that she be responsible for everything, that things must be conserved in case of later need. (p.101)
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Wikipedia in English (2)

When her company relocates to another planet, Ofelia Falfurrias, 70, who expects to be downsized anyway, decides to remain behind. Thus she discovers the planet's population as it emerges from hiding, now that the humans have left. A meeting of cultures.

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Book description
Alone at Last

People had always told Oelia what to do'; for once she was going to do what she wanted. She refused to get on the cryo ships, refused to leave the only world she could call home. and when they finally came for her, she hid - not that the authorities looked all that hard for one crazy old woman. Now Ofelia is alone, content to live with no more demands on her self or her time, the only remaining settler on an abandoned planet.

Then new settlers arrive.At first she fears they have come to reoccupy the settlement she has come to think of as hers - but they land far away. And as Ofelia secretly listens, the are slaughtered to the last child by stone-age aliens no one knew were there.

Now it is up to OFelia to save the aliens form Earth's wrath...
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