On This Page
Description
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 show more 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.. show less
Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
A hard read to get started with, but utterly engrossing as it progresses. The worldbuilding is firstclass, and reminds me a bit of Gene Wolfes in the New Sun series.
On a world where a season lasts a lifetime, the experiences of one generation has little relevance for the next. And in order to keep some semblance of order in the spring - where there is little food, and the weather is destructive - a religion that controls all aspects of peoples lives based on their horoscopes, physical defects and the family they are born to has gained ascendance in a large part of the world.
On a world where a season lasts a lifetime, the experiences of one generation has little relevance for the next. And in order to keep some semblance of order in the spring - where there is little food, and the weather is destructive - a religion that controls all aspects of peoples lives based on their horoscopes, physical defects and the family they are born to has gained ascendance in a large part of the world.
In this first volume of his Starbridge chronicles, Park introduces us to a world where seasons last a lifetime, privileged people have tattoos on their palms that compel others' obedience, and a bizarre religion attempts to preserve a rigid stratification of society. The initial narrative voice in the book is fascinating; it belongs to a member of an outcast society, meat-eaters who speak idiosynchratic languages and communicate largely through music and dance. Most of th rest of the book is told in third person and describes the activities and adventures of two of the ruling class, along with assorted secondary characters. Until the final quarter of the book, there was not a character that I found compelling, but the world (Park's city show more is called Charn, but we do not meet the Empress Jadis) is fascinatingly weird, and the style and language are both vivid and entirely appropriate to the weirdness of the world. I did not really see a structured story; the novel serves primarily to introduce us to the world and set up the sequel. I can't comment on the series yet, but I'm keeping an eye out for the next volume. show less
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Arthur C. Clarke Award Winners and Shortlisted Books
219 works; 14 members
Broderick and Di Filippo's Science Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985-2010
103 works; 7 members
Author Information
Some Editions
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Soldiers of Paradise
- Original publication date
- 1987-09
- Dedication
- for my sisters
- Blurbers
- Crowley, John; Zelazny, Roger; Sheckley, Robert; Effinger, George Alec
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 195
- Popularity
- 168,119
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.66)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 1































































