Setting the scene

First volume of Scalzi's new series feels more like fantasy than sci-fi

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Ohio-based author John Scalzi is a stranger neither to space opera nor long-running series. A little over a decade ago, the prominent blogger, ex-journalist and writer-for-hire became a published novelist with Old Man’s War, the award-winning work that also spawned five well-received sequels. Over the same period, a number of his standalone works did similarly well with readers as well as critics.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/04/2017 (3373 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Ohio-based author John Scalzi is a stranger neither to space opera nor long-running series. A little over a decade ago, the prominent blogger, ex-journalist and writer-for-hire became a published novelist with Old Man’s War, the award-winning work that also spawned five well-received sequels. Over the same period, a number of his standalone works did similarly well with readers as well as critics.

Now, the sci-fi veteran is looking to do it again with a brand new series. The result is very Scalzi: well-paced and plotted, moderately expansive and populated with snarky but likeable characters who, independent of age, cultural background or gender, all sound an awful lot like the writer himself. Basically, this book is likely what many Scalzi fans wanted — a fresh story but with the same writerly sensibilities they have come to love.

The big idea of The Collapsing Empire is that a future interstellar human civilization (unlike Old Man’s War, no alien cultures have been mentioned in this universe so far) is about to fall apart.

Athena Scalzi photo
Veteran sci-fi author John Scalzi’s latest brings a fresh story, but with the same sensibilities that fans of his work have come to love.
Athena Scalzi photo Veteran sci-fi author John Scalzi’s latest brings a fresh story, but with the same sensibilities that fans of his work have come to love.

Different planets have been knitted together by a wormhole-based transportation network called The Flow, but not for much longer. Though physicists had believed the network to be stable, the connections are beginning to disappear and only the newly minted Emperox and a handful of others realize what is about to happen.

This kicks off a series that will involve an empire using its waning days to try to save as many of its citizens as possible before they become isolated in the distant reaches of space. It will be politically and economically difficult; the entire empire came together based on an economic system of trade based on mutual need, each world producing some necessary product while not a single one is fully self-sufficient. And, of course, many individuals will try to use any moment of turmoil as an opportunity to increase their own wealth and power.

This fits the trajectory of Scalzi’s writing career, which began in the arena of military science fiction but has since shifted more to plots rooted in political intrigue, diplomatic strategizing and a greater emphasis on world-building.

In fact, the science fiction writer is almost moving more toward the kinds of plots and characters high fantasy is known for. His power-seekers, kingmakers and heart-of-gold rogues just trying to do the right thing might well fit in George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series, on which the HBO show Game of Thrones is based.

This is also relevant because, like a long fantasy series, Scalzi seems to have made less of an effort here to write a really satisfying, self-contained story in this first outing. Old Man’s War is a thought-provoking but mostly romping read, sans its sequels. The Collapsing Empire is clearly more focused on setting up the next book.

This is perfectly fine for many readers, particularly those who favour long series. But science fiction fans in general are less used to this story structure, and fans of Scalzi’s standalone works, or even his Old Man’s War series, may be less keen about reserving the payoff for some future volume. This is not to say they won’t still enjoy this new outing, but it remains to be seen whether it will be a universal favourite.

Joel Boyce is a Winnipeg writer and educator.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Sheriff who died in train collision ‘loved everybody’

Tyler Searle 6 minute read Preview

Sheriff who died in train collision ‘loved everybody’

Tyler Searle 6 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Brett Matheson-Maytwayashing was a loving father, hard-working sheriff and proud First Nations man who helped lead traditional ceremonies for a decade before he died in a collision with a train near Portage la Prairie.

Matheson-Maytwayashing, 27, died in the Tuesday morning crash, which occurred on a rural road west of Portage while he and another member of the sheriff’s service were on their way to attend court in Amaranth, his mother, Alissa Matheson-Maytwayashing, told the Free Press.

It was Matheson-Maytwayashing’s first day back at work after taking time off to participate in a sun dance ceremony in northern Saskatchewan last week, his mother said.

“Brett didn’t judge anybody, he would give people chances,” she said, her voice breaking. “He didn’t care what colour you were, he didn’t care your nationality — Brett just loved everybody.”

Read
Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Long-held core values of openness, inclusion, empathy set Convalescent Home apart from the personal care home pack

Janine LeGal 19 minute read Preview

Long-held core values of openness, inclusion, empathy set Convalescent Home apart from the personal care home pack

Janine LeGal 19 minute read Yesterday at 1:50 PM CDT

Life in a personal care home isn’t something many dream of. In fact, these days, it’s more common to dread the idea.

Manitoba has 124 licensed care homes. Some have been criticized for substandard care, chronic understaffing and depressing meals, or flagged for neglect, abuse and lack of transparency.

Though there are provincial standards in place, there is little consistency among them. More than a few are evasive, unwilling to communicate about issues of importance to residents and their families.

So, imagine finding a care home determined to do it right.

Read
Yesterday at 1:50 PM CDT

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Business owners in the East Beaches area of Lake Winnipeg hauled out generators Wednesday after a planned Manitoba Hydro outage left thousands of residents and cottagers without power.

Lise Bourassa, who runs several stores in Grand Beach, had to rent generators to accommodate the eight-hour blackout, which affected the area from Beaconia to Victoria Beach as well as Sagkeeng First Nation, while Hydro crews fixed a pole that was damaged by fire in May .

Despite the spare power source, she was only able to open one of her stores during the outage and said it came at a bad time.

“I understand the importance of what Manitoba Hydro is doing, the problem all the businesses in this area are having is that our season is very short and to be shut down for a full day has a fairly big impact, plus they added cost of getting generators,” she wrote in a message to the Free Press. “We also had less than one week to make arrangements, find electricians and generators to be able to keep all the food safe.”

Read
Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

Residents of a Winnipeg retirement home have taken matters into their own hands after the majority of the facility’s home-care aides were laid off following their unionization.

A committee of residents have banded together to work with a private agency to staff Shaftesbury Park Retirement Residence after many of its existing aides complete their final shift on Monday.

“It is heartbreaking because there are a lot of vulnerable people here who are not capable of advocating for themselves,” said Joelle Robinson, who has lived at the home since 2023 after she suffered a brain aneurysm. “We’re trying very hard to make it so that our residents aren’t completely up the creek.”

Robinson, a retired lawyer, joined Terry Hopkinson and several other residents of the South Tuxedo home to create a committee and send out a request for proposal to eight companies that specialized in seniors care.

Read
Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2026

First volume of Scalzi's new series feels more like fantasy than sci-fi

Reviewed by Joel Boyce 3 minute read Preview

First volume of Scalzi's new series feels more like fantasy than sci-fi

Reviewed by Joel Boyce 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 22, 2017

Ohio-based author John Scalzi is a stranger neither to space opera nor long-running series. A little over a decade ago, the prominent blogger, ex-journalist and writer-for-hire became a published novelist with Old Man’s War, the award-winning work that also spawned five well-received sequels. Over the same period, a number of his standalone works did similarly well with readers as well as critics.

Now, the sci-fi veteran is looking to do it again with a brand new series. The result is very Scalzi: well-paced and plotted, moderately expansive and populated with snarky but likeable characters who, independent of age, cultural background or gender, all sound an awful lot like the writer himself. Basically, this book is likely what many Scalzi fans wanted — a fresh story but with the same writerly sensibilities they have come to love.

The big idea of The Collapsing Empire is that a future interstellar human civilization (unlike Old Man’s War, no alien cultures have been mentioned in this universe so far) is about to fall apart.

Different planets have been knitted together by a wormhole-based transportation network called The Flow, but not for much longer. Though physicists had believed the network to be stable, the connections are beginning to disappear and only the newly minted Emperox and a handful of others realize what is about to happen.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 22, 2017

PCs cleared of election violation for ‘intimacy coach’ invoice

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview

PCs cleared of election violation for ‘intimacy coach’ invoice

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 4:54 PM CDT

Manitoba’s elections commissioner has cleared the Progressive Conservatives of wrongdoing after a $3,800 expense for a car rental appeared on an invoice from a company offering “intimacy coach” services.

The findings from the commissioner bring an end to a complaint raised by the NDP in October 2024, when it was alleged the PCs violated the Election Financing Act by forging financial documents related to the previous year’s election campaign.

“I am satisfied that the expense was indeed for a car rental, as the invoice described,” Bill Bowles wrote in a letter addressed to both parties Wednesday.

Concerns over the invoice to Lucid Vitality were first raised by a former PC staffer, whose internal emails with party officials were published in the Winnipeg Sun.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 4:54 PM CDT