Series: Book 1 in the Novels series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Alire, Lang:en
Summary
A triumph of the New Space Opera: fast, complicated,
wonder-filled!
Hugo Award finalist and Robert A. Heinlein
Award–winning SF writer Michael Flynn now turns to
space opera with stunningly successful results. Full of rich
echoes of space opera classics from Doc Smith to Cordwainer
Smith,
The January Dancer tells the fateful story of an
ancient pre-human artifact of great power, and the people who
found it.
Starting with Captain Amos January, who quickly loses it,
and then the others who fought, schemed, and killed to get
it, we travel around the complex, decadent, brawling,
mongrelized interstellar human civilization the artifact
might save or destroy. Collectors want the Dancer; pirates
take it, rulers crave it, and they’ll all kill if
necessary to get it. This is a thrilling yarn of love,
revolution, music, and mystery, and it ends, as all great
stories do, with shock and a beginning. Starred Review. Acclaimed SF writer Flynn
(Eifelheim)delivers an epic tale of adventure,
intrigue, suspense and mystery. Forced to land for repairs on
an unnamed, remote planet, Captain Amos January and crew
discover a cache of artifacts left by a cryptic alien race
long before humans went to space. They soon retrieve the
Dancer, a shape-changing stone that defies analysis. Possibly
the scepter of a legendary prehuman king, certainly unique,
the priceless trophy is desired by diverse governments,
military powers, plutocrats and cabals throughout
human-settled space. Flynn knits a richly detailed story of
hunters, bandits and patriots that will keep even the most
diligent readers on their toes. The plot evokes old-school
space opera with its whirlwind pace, immense scope and twist
ending, but cutting-edge extrapolation breathes vivid life
into this universe of scoundrels, heroes and romantics. This
multi-layered story demands much of the reader, but offers
more than equivalent rewards.
(Oct.)
A harper wanders into a bar on Jehovah, the focal point of
an interchange on the spaceways, and asks for the story of
the Dancer, a prehuman artifact discovered by the crew of a
ship commanded by one Captain January, which set down for
repairs on an empty planet. They lost it trading for a
working ship, and it changes hands many times over the course
of its story. It shows up again on civil war-wracked New
Eireann, then makes its way to a pirate fleet. If the legends
are true, it’s an artifact of great and terrible power,
and among its seekers are the Fudir, a Terran; Little Hugh
O’Carroll of the Eireannaughta; and the Hounds Bridget
Ban and Greystroke. Through its story Flynn weaves the
stories of the minstrel who asked about it and the man
informing her, which are connected to a web of tales
enveloping the Dancer. Flynn puts his world-building skills
to good use, creating a context that begs to be further
explored, whether by him or someone else. --Regina
Schroeder
From Publishers Weekly
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