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416 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 28, 2024
“Kiln doesn't do death like Earth does. Kiln does life.”
“A lot of symbiosis,” Primatt says, catching her breath at the top of the stairs. “Cut something open and there’s something else inside it, wearing its skin.”
Exposed to what? To everything that is Kiln. That fantastically opportunistic biosphere that says, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, and I shall find a way to infiltrate their biology and make them my own.”![]()
“How do you become the fittest on Kiln? It’s not about how many enemy empires you can trample to dust with your sandalled feet. Surviving on Kiln is all about how much life you can interlock with. The services you can provide. On Kiln no species is an island. Nothing needs to be ruggedly self-sufficient, because there’s always someone who can do the thing for you, better than you could, in exchange for what you’ve got. Evolution as a barter economy. Everything becoming better and better at finding ways to live with its neighbours. Daniel in the lions’ den lets the lions eat his legs, because then they will carry him meekly about on their backs.”
"Sometimes you go your whole life not rocking the boat and they throw you over the side anyway."
One day the camp has a deeply unwelcome visitor. There's a rumour, afterwards, that it was something brought in for the dissection table which was insufficiently dead. ...there was also a rumour that it was something that had hit the labaratory slab entirely dead but then we boffins had brought it back to life. ... All I know is that Maintenance are raked over the coals for leaving some hole open in the perimeter, even though no hole is actually found. Maybe it drifted in like a spore... The only certainty is that, one day, suddenly it's here and it's our problem. A thing from Kilm is inside the compound. It sets up on the gantry level...
On the distant world of Kiln lie the ruins of an alien civilization. It’s the greatest discovery in humanity’s spacefaring history – yet who were its builders and where did they go?
Professor Arton Daghdev had always wanted to study alien life up close. Then his wishes become a reality in the worst way. His political activism sees him exiled from Earth to Kiln’s extrasolar labour camp. There, he’s condemned to work under an alien sky until he dies.