Litany of the Long Sun: Nightside the Long Sun and Lake of the Long Sun (Book of the Long Sun, Books 1 and 2) this question feed

asked by drvale on November 28, 2006 12:50 PM
Gene Wolfe's Book of the Long Sun tetralogy ranks as one of the greatest literary achievements of 20th-century science fiction. Litany of the Long Sun, comprising the first two books in the series, is suffused with looming transcendence and theophany. Wolfe takes familiar speculative fiction tropes and embeds them in a tale so complex and wonderful that readers may find themselves wondering whether what they're reading is science fiction, fantasy, or something different altogether. Or whether it matters.

The story of Patera Silk, a devout priest whose destiny is wrapped up with the gods he serves, takes place within the Whorl, a vast, cylindrical starship that has traveled for generations and is crumbling into disrepair. Through a strange and amazing series of events, Silk finds himself descending to base thievery, running afoul of a notorious crime lord, befriending a cyborg soldier, and encountering at least one of the gods of Mainframe.

She shook her head almost imperceptibly. "All that abstinence! And now you've seen a goddess. Me. Was it worth it?"

"Yes, Loving Kypris."

She laughed again, delighted. "Why?"

The question hung in the silence of the baking sellaria while Silk tried to kick his intellect awake. At last he said haltingly, "We are so much like beasts, Kypris. We eat and we breed; then we spawn and die. The most humble share in a higher existence is worth any sacrifice."

But when Silk encounters the Outsider, who may be a God of a very different sort, all his beliefs are shaken to the core, and his life swiftly takes a messianic turn. In a rousing climax, Silk becomes the reluctant leader of a political rebellion against the corrupt Ayuntamiento, who rule the city-state of Viron.

It is not necessary to have read Wolfe's Book of the New Sun series, which takes place many centuries earlier, to enjoy the Long Sun novels, but keen-eyed readers will find many clues as to the origin of the Whorl and its gods in those stories. Further, although Wolfe's reputation for literary precision and trickery is well deserved, the Long Sun series (which continues in Epiphany of the Long Sun) is one of the more accessible places to start appreciating the author's treasures. --Therese Littleton


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I believe I read a portion of "Nightside" when it first came out and was disappointed with its seeming lack of depth when compared to the "Severian" books. Well, after several years I came across the two volume version of this four book series and gave it another try. Boy, I don't know what I was thinking the first time around. Complex plot, great characters, amazing originality, all of them are here in abundance. Patera Silk is yet another gem of a protagonist. Well worth reading, and a lot of fun to boot!
reviewed by dignified1 on November 28, 2006 1:14 PM

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All I can say is that the Long Sun series is told in 3rd person versus the 1st person view of the New Sun. This adds a whole new twist to Wolfe's writing and it's very good. If you liked Severian, I imagine you will like Silk (Patera Silk, the star of the long sun series). Especially because we don't know his thoughts until he thinks them, ie in 3rd person we find out what he's thinking as he does it (after being exposed to Severian's constant speaking of his mind, this is a bit of relief). This makes Silk and the story more like us "regular" humans, those of us without Severian's specific abilities...
reviewed by tubi on November 29, 2006 7:27 AM

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The very beginning of this book, starting with "Nightside the Long Sun," is a struggle because Mr. Wolfe plunges the reader into an almost (but not quite) alien world with a culture, lingo, religion, and social structure that has to be learned before the story makes sense. Through the process of learning this world, which parallels the main character's growing re-understanding of his own world, Mr. Wolfe starts the reader on a roller-coaster ride that doesn't stop but keeps accelerating through three more books. Warning: Buy all four before you start the first one! You won't to wait for number two. Gene Wolfe's writing style reminded of Herman Melville's, with a lot of detail, symbolism, and near-poetic passages. The roller-coaster ride of a story that Gene Wolfe began in "Nightside the Long Sun" not only continues in this second book of the tetrology, but actually picks up speed. The politics and the personalities get more complex. The characters gain depth as we discover flaws in the "good guys" and virtues in the "bad guys". As soon as you finish this book, you'll want to pick up the next one in the series. For all related books, search under Gene Wolfe's name for all titles with the word "sun" in them. You will find that the "Long Sun" series is actually part of a mega-series that also includes the "New Sun" and "Short Sun" books.
reviewed by flow on November 29, 2006 1:47 PM

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