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Schism: Part One of Triad (Saga of the…
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Schism: Part One of Triad (Saga of the Skolian Empire) (original 2004; edition 2005)

by Catherine Asaro (Author)

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277796,921 (3.92)3
In 2002, Catherine Asaro won the Nebula Award forThe Quantum Rose, the sixth novel in her Saga of the Skolian Empire. This very same novel was also named Best SF Novel by theRomantic Times.Schism: Part One of Triad is the tenth novel in this multiple award-winning series, and represents an excellent entry point into the series. For Schism harkens back to the early years of the Skolian Empire, back to the beginning of the war between Skolia and the Euban Traders. Twenty-three years have passed since the fateful vote in the Skolian Assembly that Roca missed in Skyfall. It created the first open hostility between Eube and Skolia, which has only deepened over the ensuing years. Now, Eube senses an opportunity, for strife has riven the first family of the Skolian Empire. Sauscony, the daughter of Roca and Eldrinson, is ready to seek her fortune as an officer-in-training in the Skolian military. When her father forbids her to undertake such a dangerous path, a wedge is formed as Soz chooses duty over family. Eube hopes to make this permanent, a divide that will leave the Skolian Empire ripe for conquest. And they're willing to kill anyone to make it happen. Revel in the latest adventure of this Nebula Award-winning series.… (more)
Member:mycherubsme
Title:Schism: Part One of Triad (Saga of the Skolian Empire)
Authors:Catherine Asaro (Author)
Info:Tor Science Fiction (2005), 432 pages
Collections:Your library, Currently reading, To read
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Tags:to-read, tom

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Schism by Catherine Asaro (2004)

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» See also 3 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
A continuation of Skyfall, the story is about Roca's children, primarily Soz. Less romance, more battles. (May 26, 2005) ( )
  cindywho | May 27, 2019 |
This turns out not to be the beginning of the Ruby Dynasty books about the empaths who rule one empire while trying to fight off the empath-torturing antiempaths who rule another, but it still explained enough to be an okay starting point. Humanity has spread out and changed into a number of variants through deliberate manipulation and genetic drift; only the Rhon psions can run the Network that enables the Ruby Empire to maintain FTL travel, its only advantage over the Traders (who enslave everyone they can, and love the suffering of empaths they keep as “providers”). This book focuses on the family drama of one branch of the Rhon psions, with two children going into military training and their poet-king father fighting it—until he falls into the hands of a Trader on a secret mission. I’m not sure I’m sold yet, but I’m willing to keep going. ( )
  rivkat | Feb 1, 2018 |
This book is set around the time Soz leaves home and trains as a Jagernaut. For that reason, combined with the fact the first chapter was published as a teaser somewhere, it often feels oddly familiar -quite a few of the incidents have been mentioned in passing or in flash-back in the other books in this series.

Despite that it's a good read, evil Aristos, political machinations, the training to become an heir and a Jagernaut are all mixed in together, along with the usual (and this time, unusually repeated) explanations about entering inversion and the like. ( )
  lewispike | Jul 3, 2008 |
Like Skyfall before it, Schism is set prior to Catherine Asaro's other Skolian novels, this time telling the story of Roca and Eldrinson's children, with special focus on Soz's entrance to the Deshian Military Academy and her younger brother Shannon's adolescence.

Soz is seventeen as the book begins, determined to follow her older brother Althor off Lyshriol and become a Jagernaut. Her father is violently opposed to this, both because women are not warriors by Lyshrioli tradition and, more importantly, because he cannot bear the thought of sending his children to war against the Traders. When Soz is granted early admission to DMA and Althor agrees to take her there, he disowns both his children. From there, the book follows three main characters; Soz, Eldrinson and Shannon.

Soz enters the Academy as plain Sauscony Valdoria, but knowing that Kurj has just selected both her and Althor as potential heirs and is waiting to see how they both turn out. Outspoken, impetuous and brilliant, she is soon racing through her classes and building up a mountain of demerit points. She rapidly progresses through the Academy, but still needs to do some growing and maturing to best use her great talents.

Shannon, fourteen, quiet and very different even among Roca and Eldrinson's different children, after a confusing encounter with Althor while he is home, decides the troubles that have now beset the family are all his fault. He takes his father's lyrine, Moonglaze, and literally heads for the hills. Shannon is a throw back to a Blue Dale Archer ancestor, and he heads into the Blue Dale Mountains hoping to find the legendary Archers and a place where he fits in.

As soon as Shannon is discovered missing, Eldrinson sets off to find him and falls into his own kind of trouble. He has to fight to survive at the same time as he is trying to reconcile himself to the fact his children don't have the same vision of their own futures that he does.

Schism is the first book of two, that together are titled Triad, suggesting part of the ultimate story will be how Eldrinson becomes the Web Key and the Dyad becomes a Triad, since we know from the later books that this happens. That is perhaps the main weakness of this book - we know what is going to happen, at least in general terms. The book ends on what would be a major cliffhanger, except for the fact that we already know the character this concerns is going to make it because we've already met them in the other books. For me, this isn't a concern. I'm more concerned about how and why things happen rather than what happens. It can be quite fun knowing what is going to be the end result and still navigate the curve balls the author throws at readers along the way. I might not need to worry about the endangered character's survival, but I sure want to know how the current mess is going to be resolved.

I am already predisposed to love Asaro's books, especially the Skolian series. I love the setting, I love the characters and I love the way she is changing the world from the black and white we first through it was. So I loved this one too. Soz would have to be my favourite character, so seeing more of her and how she became the woman I first met in Primary Inversion is a delight. I am finding that I don't remember everything that has already happened in other books, and I'm sure I've missed a few subtle moments of foreshadowing, which is a pity as I love the way Asaro does these. Still, I'm sure I'll be reading Schism again in the future, so hopefully I'll pick up things of missed that time around.

I do love the way Asaro plays with the characters and their companions. There is a lovely little scene where Soz's room mates want to know how it is that she appears to know Imperator Kurj. She tries to prevaricate, but they are persistent. Finally, she admits that her mother knew his father and when asked how, states simply, "They were married" and waits for the penny to drop.

I think my only real complaint is that, in this attitude to his children's dreams and the way he deals with a major disability Eldrinson tends to come across as a whiny boy at times. I'm guessing this in intentional and he's going to grow out of it - after all, despite having ten children he can't be much older than his late thirties. But I did want to slap him around a bit, especially for the way he treated Roca.

I don't really think that this would be the best book to start reading Asaro's Skolian series with, but it is a great addition to the tale. However, it is clearly unfinished. I have a feeling I read somewhere that Triad was supposed to be one book, but it got too big. This makes sense, as it ends like the end of a chapter, not the end of the book. I'm eagerly awaiting the second half of the story. ( )
  rocalisa | Jul 25, 2006 |
Enjoyed this one, Soz's earlier years, when she has to fight for the right to go for training, almost losing her family. This was more concerned with events rather than a romance proper and I really enjoyed it. ( )
  wyvernfriend | May 22, 2006 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Catherine Asaroprimary authorall editionscalculated
Royo, LuisCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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In 2002, Catherine Asaro won the Nebula Award forThe Quantum Rose, the sixth novel in her Saga of the Skolian Empire. This very same novel was also named Best SF Novel by theRomantic Times.Schism: Part One of Triad is the tenth novel in this multiple award-winning series, and represents an excellent entry point into the series. For Schism harkens back to the early years of the Skolian Empire, back to the beginning of the war between Skolia and the Euban Traders. Twenty-three years have passed since the fateful vote in the Skolian Assembly that Roca missed in Skyfall. It created the first open hostility between Eube and Skolia, which has only deepened over the ensuing years. Now, Eube senses an opportunity, for strife has riven the first family of the Skolian Empire. Sauscony, the daughter of Roca and Eldrinson, is ready to seek her fortune as an officer-in-training in the Skolian military. When her father forbids her to undertake such a dangerous path, a wedge is formed as Soz chooses duty over family. Eube hopes to make this permanent, a divide that will leave the Skolian Empire ripe for conquest. And they're willing to kill anyone to make it happen. Revel in the latest adventure of this Nebula Award-winning series.

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