This is the first book in the Psi Corps trilogy, and one of the first B5 books to be written based on an outline by JMS. I still have my first-edition paperback copy of the book, and it was definitely interesting to go back for a re-read after so many years.
The first thing that struck me was how it definitely feels like it was written from an outline from JMS. And I don’t necessarily mean that in a good way. The story is essentially the story of Kevin Vacit, the man who would set the Psi Corps on its course through history while also setting up a resistance to keep it in check. It’s the story of where Vacit came from, how he fooled the world into believing that a mundane was leading the effort to control those dangerous telepaths, and how he begat Alfred Bester. Along the way, Kevin Vacit manages to learn, and keep very quiet, the truth about the origins of human telepaths.
In terms of shedding light on the hyper-detailed history of the “Babylon 5” universe, the book does its job. It introduces, among other things, the interesting notion that the telepath underground was a necessary counterweight to the Psi Corps. Unfortunately, the story is occasionally too scattered for its own good. It often feels like the author was under a deadline for the first book, and just did whatever he could to get the job done as quickly as possible. As such, some portions of the book are barely more than a slightly fleshed-out bullet point. Where the story could use much more depth and consideration, the author jumps to the next bullet point.
The end result is a book that sounds a lot better in theory than in reality. Fans of the series will definitely enjoy the book the first time around, as revelations abound throughout. But the book doesn’t hold up well the second time around.
Rating: 7/10

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