Ratings3
Average rating2.7
An epic adventure by the author of the award-winning Riverworld series. Fifteen billion years from now, Earth is a dying planet, its skies darkened by the ashes of burned-out galaxies, its molten core long cooled. The sunless planet is nearing the day of final gravitational collapse in the surrounding galaxy. Mutations and evolution have led to a great disparity of life-forms, while civilization has resorted to the primitive. Young Deyv of the Turtle Tribe knew nothing of his world's history or its fate. He lived only to track down the wretched Yawtl who had stolen his precious Soul Egg. Joined by other victims of the same thief--the feisty Vana and the plant-man Sloosh--the group sets off across a nightmare landscape of monster-haunted jungle and wetland. Their search leads them ultimately to the jeweled wasteland of the Shemibob, an ageless being from another star who knows Earth's end is near and holds the only key to escape.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is just Neolithic historical fiction pretending to be fantasy pretending to be dying Earth scifi, and poorly written all the way (feels like reading a cold synopsis of the real story). The MC is also not relatable and the other characters are one-dimensional cardboards.
3 stars, Metaphorosis Reviews
Summary:
At the twilight of a world, a young man goes in search of mate, but soon loses his soul egg. Without it, he's no one, and in his search for it, he finds adventure, science, magic, love, and escape from a rapidly collapsing world.
Review:
I've read a lot of Philip Jose Farmer in recent months. I've liked very little of it. In fact, I'd started to think that my enjoyment of the Riverworld series was an anomaly, and that, to put it bluntly, Farmer was simply not a very good writer.
Dark is the Sun doesn't entirely confound that view; it's not a work of any particular genius. But it is head and shoulders above the World of Tiers series, to pick one example. It's so different that it reads as if it had been written by an entirely different author. Had I picked it up blind, I'd have assumed it to be a lost Piers Anthony novel from the 1970s, or a collaboration with him during that period. It has the same mounting introduction of novelty after novelty, and the same relentless, if somewhat facile, logical application of concepts. The sexism is limited and of its time rather than well past it. In short, it's like reading a book by a whole different author.
That doesn't mean this is a good book, but it's not a bad one. It's got an interesting world, decent (if into entirely credible) characters, and a challenging quest. There's not a lot of surprise, but there's plenty to keep you going. Of the half dozen Farmer books I've read recently, this is the only one that had me looking forward (slightly) to the next reading session, rather than looking for any excuse to put it off.
I can't say this is the Riverworld Farmer I remember and liked, but it's a lot like the Tarot and Cluster Anthony that I remember and liked. If you're a fan of those series, you might like this as well.
I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.