Soldiers of Paradise Where the seasons last for generations, hard winter makes for hard religion. The worlds of the solar system are the hells through which all souls must incarnate on their journey to Paradise; all, that is, but the Starbridges, nobles who serve to enforce the "divine will." In the lowest slums of the city-state of Charn, a Starbridge doctor and a drunken prince defy the law to bring medicine to the poor and hear the story-music of the refugee Antinomials, a wild people who shun words, infidels pressed to the edge of extinction. As a decades-long pitched battle approaches the city and the Bishop of Charn herself is condemned for impurity, the doctor and the prince will follow their compassion into the heart of a revolution, just on the eve of spring, with its strange and treacherous sugar rain.
Sugar Rain The second book in the Starbridge Chronicles, Sugar Rain relates the stories of Thanakar and Charity Starbridge during the revolution that ended the first book in the series, Soldiers of Paradise. The generations-long winter has drawn to a close, and with it the power of the tyrannical Starbridge theocracy that maintained order during the years of hunger. But a cruelly pragmatic priest has set the stage for a new faith, and even those who defy him seem fated to play out roles that will inevitably bring it to pass. As Thanakar struggles in exile to find safe harbor for his adopted family, Charity Starbridge undertakes a mythic journey, passing through various underworlds to join him. Sugar Rain was a finalist for the Locus Reader Poll Award.
Paul Park (born 1954) is an American science fiction author and fantasy author. He lives in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, with his wife and two children. He also teaches a Reading and Writing Science Fiction course at Williams College. He has also taught several times at the Clarion West Writing Workshop.
Park appeared on the American science fiction scene in 1987 and quickly established himself as a writer of polished, if often grim, literary science fiction. His first work was the Starbridge Chronicles trilogy, set on a world with generations-long seasons much like Brian Aldiss' Helliconia trilogy. His critically acclaimed novels have since dealt with colonialism on alien worlds (Coelestis), Biblical (Three Marys) and theosophical (The Gospel of Corax) legends, a parallel world where magic works (A Princess of Roumania and its sequels, The Tourmaline, The White Tyger and The Hidden World), and other topics. He has published short stories in Omni Magazine, Interzone and other magazines.
Very happy to have finally finished this volume which collects the first two books in Park's Starbridge sequence. I think that I needed to wait until I'd read and appreciated other stories in a similar vein - a lot of Wolfe, mainly. Park's excellent at worldbuilding - but less than excellent at crafting a story that's approachable for most readers. For instance, you have to get halfway through the first book before you have an idea of what the antinomials are.
Reading this was like reading a good half-dozen books of varying genres, and also a bit like reading a better template for GRRM's ASOIAF series. Much more enjoyable than the latter though.
A fascinating, curious world in which seasons run generations long and religion has a deathlike grip on the culture. The story takes place during the spring as the citizens of Charn and Caladon slough off their winter conservativism and embrace the idea of the coming abundance of summer. The characters are engaging and charming, and it's a good story. And while reading it I was unaware that there is a third book (the sugar festival is the first two books of the trilogy) so at the end I felt let down. Like the story was incomplete. So now I'm very much looking forward to getting my hands on the third book to read the conclusion of this captivating story.