WOOOOW, what. great part 3 to the Long Sun cycle.
Contrary to many reviewers on Goodreads, I found this novel riveting. Some of the exciting events that Wolfe allows us in this part of the story are:
- a full blown rebellion of 100,000 normal people against the authorities
- crazy revelations that Wolfe has kept from us in the first two books, which bring what has happened up to now into a whole new light
- tunnels, cannibals, blind gods, chem soldiers, possession by gods, ghosts, pits, another kingdom attacking Viron from the skies
- Great character development for Maytera Marble, for Silk, Auk, and many other characters.
- death, violence, intrigue
The narrative is deliberately jagged, its not told in exact chronological order in parts and there are big scenes sometimes skipped over and mentioned in passing by the characters as they talk. This is interesting as the whole story up until now, from book 1 to 3 has been told over a matter of a few days. So much has happened!
I must confess, I read the first novel in this series once, then put it down, only to take it up again years later. Although I loved this Whorl of the Long Sun (basically a generation ship), it certainly is hard going at time, due to so much being unexplained, so many new words, so many characters with similar names (always named for a reason, of course. This is Gene Wolfe here).
Wolfe explores some of his common themes here in detail, humanizing the android Maytera's (nuns) in a way I have never experienced before. Yes there are some flaws, some of the dialog is too 'chatty' and explainy at times, and Wolfe isn;t afraid to take his time. Yet overall this was such an excellent book.
Key themes: What makes us 'chosen'. What defines personhood. Disillusionment and belief. Rebellion - it's worth and it's dangers. Loyalty. Layers of truth.