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FLIGHT IN YIKTOR

A frail, diffident sequel to Exiles of the Stars, from the veteran author of, most recently, Forerunner: the Second Venture (1985). Farree, a pathetic, crippled slave of unknown ancestry, lives in the Limits (slums) of Grant's World; he is purchased by a pair of human-alien Thassa, the former Moon Singer Maelen and her companion Krip, because of his telepathic powers. Maelen and Krip are headed for planet Yiktor, once a stronghold of the Thassa, now mostly deserted. But they are stalked by agents of the Thieves' Guild who believe that Maelen and Krip will lead them to caches of ancient Thassa weapons and artifacts. So while Maelen and Krip struggle to ingratiate themselves with the skeptical Thassa authorities, the Guild kidnaps Farree and baits a trap with him. Farree, helped by some telepathic animals with whom he has been confined, escapes—but during the pursuit his hunchback splits open: the reviled cripple is transformed into a beautiful winged creature. In most of Norton's works, the characters, situations, and voices are inescapably juvenile. This one is no exception. The ambiance is magical rather than science fictional. The backdrop is mostly froth. And the narrative sounds absurdly like a muffled groan. So, overall, this one would look better—though by no means convincing—on the YA shelf.

Pub Date: May 19, 1986

ISBN: 0812510089

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: May 3, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 1986

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THE UNSPOKEN NAME

A moderately promising entry that should find an audience.

Larkwood's debut, the first of a fantasy series, begins in familiar fashion as a warrior-maiden adventure and gradually develops into a love story.

In this imaginative but never fully convincing universe, places may be reached via magical gates leading through a maze of dead and dying worlds. Magic powers derive from a rare, innate ability combined with power vouchsafed by a patron god. Csorwe is of a hominin race that sports tusks—these are functionless and, unfortunately, impossible to visualize without thinking "piggish." In a narrative rendered in crisp, vivid prose, Csorwe serves the oracular shrine of a god—the Unspoken Name—but is destined soon to sacrifice herself. Then Sethennai, a wizard—his race has Spock ears—requesting a prophesy about the mysterious and powerful Reliquary of Pentravesse, offers her a choice: serve him and live, or marry the god and die. Csorwe chooses life and becomes Sethennai's ninja. The wizard, formerly the ruler of the city Tlaanthothe, needs her to help reclaim his position from a scheming rival. Later, during a quest to secure the Reliquary, she will clash with the Qarsazhi, imperial interworld extortionists, and their powerful young wizard Shuthmili, who's fated to be absorbed by their enforcement arm but, like Csorwe, never conceived other possibilities. Until this point, the story meanders, but finally the author finds a unique voice no longer dependent on boilerplate action, chases, escapes, torture, and fights. And when Csorwe and Shuthmili meet and fumble toward a relationship, we recognize heartfelt emotion, real substance, and an emergent theme: loyalties and the choices we make that engender them. These, along with the strong female leads, are solid foundations upon which to build.

A moderately promising entry that should find an audience.

Pub Date: Feb. 11, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-23890-0

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2019

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DEATH'S END

From the Remembrance of Earth's Past series , Vol. 3

Liu’s trilogy is the first major work of science fiction to come to the West out of China, and it’s a masterpiece.

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What if alien civilizations do exist? In this final installment of a stunning and provocative trilogy (The Dark Forest, 2015, etc.), Liu teases out the grim, unsettling implications.

Previously, astronomer-turned-sociologist Luo Ji forestalled an invasion attempt by advanced aliens from planet Trisolaris. Luo’s “dark forest” deterrence works thus: if intelligent species exist, inevitably some will be hostile; therefore, safety lies in remaining hidden while threatening to reveal your enemy’s location to the predators. Earth knows where Trisolaris is, but the Trisolarans can’t threaten to reveal Earth’s location since they want to occupy it. Here, the story picks up at an earlier juncture. Cheng Xin, an aerospace engineer developing a probe to study the approaching Trisolaran fleet, learns that a friend has been tricked into volunteering to die in order to assist the project. Horrified, she retreats into hibernation. When she revives centuries later, dark forest deterrence holds the Trisolarans at bay. Luo, now old, hands Cheng the key to Earth’s defense. Unfortunately, the sophons—tiny, intelligent, light-speed computers sent by the Trisolarans as spies—know Cheng lacks Luo’s ruthlessness and immediately seize control of Earth; only by luck does Earth manage to trigger its deterrent. Hostile aliens immediately destroy planet Trisolaris, whose invasion fleet turns away because it’s only a matter of time before the same invisible antagonists deduce the existence of Earth and strike the solar system. Once again, Cheng must choose between logical ruthlessness and simple human compassion, with the fate of humanity at stake. This utterly absorbing book shows little interest in linear narrative or conventional character interactions. Instead, the author offers dilemmas moral, philosophical, and political; perspectives—a spectacular glimpse of three dimensions seen from a four-dimensional viewpoint; a dying universe shattered by billions of years of warfare; and persuasive ideas whose dismal repercussions extend beyond hope and despair into, inescapably, real-world significance.

Liu’s trilogy is the first major work of science fiction to come to the West out of China, and it’s a masterpiece.

Pub Date: Sept. 20, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-7653-7710-4

Page Count: 592

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: June 29, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2016

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