In a world where every movement costs power, Chen An has spent twenty-six years doing almost nothing.
On a managed float in the 22nd-century sea, residents receive just enough energy to survive - but not enough to ask questions, choose their own path, or want something the system hasn't already arranged. Chen An doesn't mind. The system is reliable. The rations arrive on time. There is nothing he needs that he hasn't already been given.
Then a stranger sits down beside him on the west railing and watches the people walk by.
Gu Yuan has been watching for a hundred years. He carries a proposal that has been sitting at Awaiting Confirmation for thirty-one of them - a calculation showing that 10% of wasted land power could restore something the sea people have slowly, quietly lost. Not comfort. Not survival.
Where the Crabs Still Move is a quiet speculative novel about what happens when one person begins to notice the shape of the walls around them - and takes one small, sideways step.
Prequel to the Ocean Trilogy.