Ratings19
Average rating3.8
This is as close to a call-back to the best works of Robert Heinlein and Larry Niven. We have a fantastic, novel setting inside of an air-filled “fullerene” balloon that has a 5,000 mile diameter. This balloon constitutes the “planet” of Virga. There is no gravity inside Virga and very little “ground.” The people of Virga live in a weightless environment where they can fly for thousands of miles. They live in settlements that produce gravity by centrifugal effects. All light in Virga is created by artificial “suns” that illuminate only scant territories of this enormous domain.
In the best tradition of Larry Niven, this is a lot to take in.
Clustered around individual “suns” are nations. Hayden Griffin belongs to the nation of Aerie which was conquered by the nomadic nation of Slipstream. His parents are part of the Aerie resistance with plans to light up a new sun and declare independence. Things go wrong and Hayden is left with a mission of vengeance.
Flash forward 15 years and Hayden is infiltrating into Slipstream society. Suddenly, he is called out to travel with his enemy to the outer darkness in search of a device that will allow Slipstream to fight its enemies.
We get the Cook's tour of Virga. We see the vast cloud banks, the pirates, and the outer darkness. We get a glimpse of Virga's history and society. Sword fights and battles between airships.
It's all good fun and quite exciting.
It was okay. I found it very unforgiving if you didn't know things ahead of time.
For example, the book was recommended to me so I never read the blurb about the book. Within a page or two I got really confused. Turns out the “world” was the inside of a balloon the size of a planet.
I know a couple of times I had to go back pages to check if i missed something.
That being said, they had some interesting overarching stories that were eventually reveled. I don't think I'd recommend the book to anyone, but i wouldn't discourage anyone who was interested. It just wasn't for me.
Decent book. Full review at http://bookwi.se/sun-of-suns-by-karl-schroeder/
Great world building along with character growth and fast pacing delivery make a great story in Karl Schroeder's Sun of Suns.
It's been a long time since science fiction has captivated me the way that Sun of Suns has done. Usually I go to the fantasy realm to get good world building, but this book pulled me in from the beginning. The entire book I kept wondering if the world that this was set in actually followed Newtonian physics or not. The way the natural sciences of the world were introduced was easy to follow and given out in digestible chunks. It was done in such a wonder way as to make the natural science's feel like another character that drove the plot, just like the protagonists.
The character's in the book were all well described and showed growth throughout the book. Obviously the main character has his motivations and struggles with them, but so do all the side characters. There really are very few totally bad guys in this book, just like there really isn't any absolutely good guys. Every character has their yin and yang moments in the book. Every character is sympathetic at one point or another just like every character is very callous at times.
Mixed in with everything that typically slows down a good story is an extremely fast pace of action. The story moves from scene to scene, fight to fight with enough detail that you actually visualize the fights and world around everyone. I'm reminded of the great space opera fight scenes in Star Wars with all the speeders zooming in and around the large ships using speed and mobility to their advantage, while the large ships fight it out, while boarding parties fight in inside the ships.
The ending, while not unpredictable, left me wanting more. Wanting to see how the world itself develops. Wanting to know who get's what they strove for. Wanting to know what the future holds.
4.5 stars, Metaphorosis reviews
Summary
In the weird gaseous sphere of Virga, towns and cities are loose conglomerations of linked structures floating far from the world's central sun. Hayden is in his teens when his parents die in a failed attempt to break free off oppressive invaders by lighting their own renegade sun. As an older and more mature young man, he still harbors plans of revenge, but the world is much more complicated than he'd envisioned.
Review
I can't remember where or when I picked up Sun of Suns, but I know that I'd read Schroeder's novel Ventus (which I thought was promising, but slow), that Sun of Suns was one of the early e-books I got, and that it was in my library by 2010 at the latest. I recall enjoying it quite a bit, but for some reason didn't carry on to the rest of the series. So when I saw some of those on sale recently, I picked them up.
On this second reading, I liked Sun of Suns just as much as on the first go-round. It's innovative, with engaging characters and a solid plot. I have a few quibbles here and there, but I really enjoyed the story. I'd had a few concerns about buying the series in bulk, as it were – that often doesn't end well – but so far so good, and I'm keen to finally go on to the other books.
Schroeder doesn't just set out an unusual and intriguing setting, he's careful to lay the trail for more surprises and innovation to come. I'm genuinely curious to find out what comes next. A very solid SF story, and one I recommend.