Book Review: “The Termite Queen Volume One: The Speaking of the Dead” by Lorinda J. Taylor

Before we begin, I want to point out that this book, which is a science-fiction romance/adventure story, was published in 2014, a full five years before the Star Wars movie that started with the line “The dead speak!” In case you wanted further evidence that the indie book scene has fresher ideas than multi-billion dollar entertainment franchises.

But, as anyone who has read Lorinda Taylor’s The Man Who Found Birds Among the Stars series may be anticipating, this is far more Trek than Wars. It has a federation of intelligent life forms, all of whom work together in a peaceful spirit of friendly collaboration. At the center of the search for intelligent life is Asc. Kaitrin Oliva, a skilled linguistic anthropologist, or should I say, xeno-linguist.

When another exploration team brings back a huge, mortally wounded termite, Asc. Oliva attempts to communicate with it, and records the sounds it makes before it dies. From this, she is eventually able to work out the basics of the termite language, and so a return expedition is soon planned, led by the handsome but enigmatic Prof. Griffen Gwidian.

Prof. Gwidian has a good deal of the Byronic hero about him; cultured and aristocratic, moody and secretive about his past, he and Kaitrin embark upon a tumultuous relationship, to which much the expedition preparation is a backdrop. Interwoven with the romance of the human characters is a palace intrigue drama among the alien termites. These sections are handled almost like a play, complete with stage directions. I liked these parts best of all.

The book features plenty of world-building, including a detailed history of how Earth got to be in the shape it’s in by the 30th century. It’s an optimistic take, again very much in the vein of Roddenberry’s hopeful vision of the future. Of course, even in Taylor’s history of the intervening hundreds of years, humanity has to go through a few rough patches.

But the bulk of the story centers on Gwidian and Oliva’s stormy romance, and in that regard it feels like a more old-fashioned book. Almost like something a Brontë might have written. In the context of the high-tech, spacefaring setting, it was nice to have something so familiar to keep things grounded.

In short, lovers of both sci-fi and romance will find something to enjoy in this book. Taylor’s obvious appreciation for language helps bring both the human and non-human characters together. The only caveat is that, like The Man Who Found Birds Among the Stars, this book ends on a cliffhanger that makes reading the next book in the series an absolute must to see how things play out. So, if you read this one, know that you’ll be wanting to pick up the second one as soon as you finish.

6 Comments

  1. Thanks so much! A few comments: Obviously, this was meant to be one novel, not two, but I’m so long-winded, it turned out just too long for one big book. It’s actually in four parts, and Pt.3-4 occur in vol. 2. The huge climax comes in Pt. 3, so you do need to read both volumes! And then of course it all leads into “The Labors of Ki’shto’ba Huge-Head” series, which in my opinion is superior to anything else I’ve ever written.
    I was inspired to make Griffen a Rochester-type character (so you hit it right with the Bronte connection) – a character with a mysterious secret, although not a mad wife in the attic in this case. You’ll learn about Griffen’s psychological flaws only in Pt.4.
    I’m definitely Star-Trek influenced. I’ll flatly state that I don’t like Star-Wars and I’ve never seen any of them except the first one produced. I apologize to all the Star-Wars fans out there.
    And everybody likes the termites part best, including me! Ha! Mo’gri’ta’tu is one of the great villains of all time (in the author’s humble opinion)! You’ll meet him again in Labors, Pt.4, where our hero makes the requisite visit to the Underworld.

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