

Robson mines the situation for both tension and humor, and Lydia owns her story, coming across as a brash, compassionate, and incredibly persistent heroine readers will root for. To clear her name, she plunges into an ever-thickening web of intrigue around Logisi language and technology-and humanity’s extraterrestrial xenophobia. Then Fitz turns up murdered in the home the two share, leaving Lydia a suspect. Communicating in the telepathic Logisi language leaves humans effectively drunk, a side effect Fitz is sympathetic to, even standing up for Lydia after a few public debacles.

While Lydia’s not the best translator at her agency, she and Fitz work well together.

Human Lydia serves as the translator for Fitz, the Logi cultural attaché to Earth. Robson ( Hearts of Oak) spins a murder mystery into a memorable exploration of the power of language and technology in a post first-contact world.
