A little slow at the start, but not bad once it got going. And I'm fascinated by how … metaphysical the quest that drives the plot is.
I picked the book up on a whim, a battered paperback copy from a used bookstore in a strip mall in Tennessee. I knew Dickson mainly by reputation, and knew that the Dorsai were arguably his most famous creation. The book mentioned them on the cover, so I figured I'd give it a try.
Turns out that this is, like, the eighth or ninth book in a series. Unfamiliarity with the previous volumes definitely hindered my enjoyment, and probably spoiled a number of points should I ever decide to read any of them.
So Hal Mayne lives in the Final Encyclopedia, a satellite repository of the sum total of human knowledge. It–and Earth itself–are protected by an impenetrable phase shield. They need it because of a slowly growing fleet of spaceships massing outside, the forces of the Others, led by Hal's nemesis, Bleys Ahrens. Hal has been working on finding his way into something called the Creative Universe, a process involving lots of meditation and mental focus. If he fails to achieve it, then Earth will fall. And then he receives word of the Chantry Guild, an isolated group on a distant planet that might be able to help him with the breakthrough he needs …
It's certainly quite a Space Opera plot. We have two men, both prime physical and mental specimens, who are arch rivals, with the fate of the Universe at stake. As I said, it's a bit slow out of the gate, mainly because of all the exposition that needs to cover the backstory and to set up what the Creative Universe is and why it's so important–it's much more metaphysical than I'd expect from an SF novel.
I wish I'd picked a different Dickson book to start with, ideally one where the Dorsai are more the focus. This one wasn't bad, but it probably means a lot more to anyone following the series than it does to the casual reader.