From Booklist
The fifth and longest Jupiter yarn is a little hard to place in the series' chronology. But not to quibble. Pournelle's first work written without a coauthor in many years is an extremely strong story. Kip, a boy on the interstellar colony Paradise, learns he has a communications chip in his head that allows him to speak to an artificial intelligence program that was left in the ruling corporation's main computer by his dead mother. With his friends Lara and Marty, Kip becomes crucial in the fight against a takeover of the corporation by those who would destroy the semisapient centaurs and the highly intelligent and dangerous aquatic plants called Starswanns. Kip turns out to be heir to the corporation, a discovery that comes, along with the victory of the good guys and gals, only after plenty of suspenseful action in a well-realized setting. This novel echoes Heinlein's juveniles more closely than any other in the series, but that will be no fault to most readers.
Roland Green
Product Description
Daring at last to ask the benevolent voice in his head some difficult questions, young Kip learns that his parents had implanted a chip in his brain that connects him to a powerful computer, that they had been subsequently killed, and that his own life is also in danger.