Ratings1
Average rating4
Return to Virga, a bubble universe artificially separated from our own future universe, and the setting ofSun of Suns and Queen of Candesce. Chaison Fanning, the admiral of a fleet of warships, has been captured and imprisoned by his enemies, but is suddenly rescued and set free. He flees through the sky to his home city to confront the ruler who betrayed him. And perhaps even to regain his lovely, powerful, and subversive wife, Venera, who he has not seen since she fled with the key to the artificial sun at the center of Virga, Candesce. With Pirate Sun, Schroeder sets a whole new standard for hard science fiction space opera. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Featured Series
5 primary booksVirga is a 5-book series with 5 released primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Karl Schroeder.
Reviews with the most likes.
3.5 stars, Metaphorosis reviews
Summary
Imprisoned by the rigid Falcon nation he saved his own home nation from, Admiral Chaison Fanning is unexpectedly rescued - but not by anyone he knows. As he tries to find his way back home to his wife, he has to contend with the secret purposes of his rescuer and many others.
Review
Three books in and this series is still going strong. Schroeder has done an admirable job of exploring his unusual setting but not letting it overwhelm a character-based story. Plus, he's kept the tension high not just within the world, but with a well-measured trickle of information about what's outside. Nominally, those external forces are what's driving the plot here, but in fact it's an adventure story following the third of the key characters introduced in the first book.
While Schroeder does well in keeping the sequencing clear, the characterization is weakened a bit by some continuity failures. In Sun of Suns, Venera Fanning is introduced as something of a sociopath. In Queen of Candesce, she's substantially humanized. In this third book, her imprisoned husband, Chaison, is anxious to get back to her – but he hasn't met the new Venera. For this reason, his insistence on returning to the woman he loves is puzzling – last we saw them together, she was clearly manipulating him, he knew it, and relations were quite cold between them. There's no very good reason he should care about her – as she was in book 1. I found that difficult to get past, since he brings up his desire for her frequently.
The book is also a little heavier on the desire than it needs to be – there are a lot of references to breasts. I wouldn't have noticed it in an older book, but in a modern novel it stands out. It's also the case that all the key characters seem to be good looking and attract admirers easily, but that's par for the course with many adventures.
Schroeder brings in the intriguing Virga Home Guard, which is interesting, but I felt he didn't do a great job of staying within what we know of them. They become just one of many factions contending for power for obscure reasons.
This middle book isn't quite as strong as its predecessors, but it's still a lot of fun, and very well constructed. I look forward to the next in line, which promises to bring the key actors together again. If you haven't read these books, I recommend them.