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The Sky People by S.M. Stirling
Book Summary InformationAuthor: S.M. Stirling Edition: Mass Market Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2007-10-02 ISBN: 0765353768 Number of pages: 336 Publisher: Tor Science Fiction
Book Reviews of The Sky PeopleBook Review: Pulp Science Fiction Makes a Successful Comeback Summary: 5 Stars
I'm giving this book as many stars as I can get my hands on. It's just that good.
I've long had an appreciation for the roots of science fiction, but so many of the old stories are so dated that they're inaccessible. Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote wonderful stories in captivating settings, but trying, a century later, to sift through the outdated syntax of four generations ago, references to things that went out when my grandparents were children, the ways in which people act and react that seem so bizarre to modern sensibilities, and especially the uncomfortable vague hints of latent racism in the descriptions of barbaric and/or exotic cultures erodes the fun of these reads quite a bit.
Granted that will be true of most books written today, one of these days. So very few authors tell really timeless stories. I'd be shocked to learn that Stirling will be considered one of them, so I hope that someone keeps the pulp SF adventure story alive in books that make sense by twenty-second standards some day.
In the mean time we have a remarkably good story here.
We begin with a beautiful jungle princess in leather lingerie and her big strong manly retainers--the old setting is kept in place, but seriously, their culture is developed in a way sensitive to modern ideas about multiculturalism--fleeing from Neanderthals. A strange object lands in their path. Back in the USSR, where we learn that it's the early 1960s, the Soviet space agency is shocked that its probe is transmitting images of human life from Venus.
Fast forward to 1988. There are two human (Earth human, that is) bases on Venus: a primarily American one that's a joint venture with the UK, Commonwealth, OAS, Japan, and Korea; and an "EastBloc" one, which is the USSR, the PRC, and their various satellite states. It seems China is on the way to eclipsing the Soviets as the big dog in their alliance system. Though Deng Xiaoping is never idenfitied by name, both countries seem to have bought into his rather loose interpretation of socialism. Western Europe tried to set up its own bloc and become nonaligned. At this they succeeded, but they're far behind both the other two blocs and are literally worlds away from being able to build bases on Venus and Mars (Mars is also inhabited, of course). The communist base is in the middle of nowhere, and the American and friends base is near Kartahown, a bronze age city which rules a good-sized chunk of territory (how thoroughly they impose order in it is, of course, questionable by modern standards) and represents the most advanced civilization on the planet, not counting the offworlders. The Kartahownians worship celestial objects so assume the astronauts are demigods. Or demons--some in the Kartahownian clergy hate the visitors because they describe themselves as coming from another world on which the sun shines--as close as the Venusians can come to understanding the Copernican model of the solar system--and this is blasphemous. The sun shines on Venus alone, according to their theology. The astronauts dialed down their attempts to teach the Venusians astronomy when they realized this.
Anyway, the astronauts trade with both the Kartahownians and their nomadic neighbors. They're not shy about interfering in the development of these early civilizations, as a Star Trek crew would be, but they're not out to imperialize, either.
So the Americans--that is, our Cajun hero Mark Vitrak, a black woman who has the same specialty he does, and a "Brit" who turns out to be not what he seems (I'll get that out of the way now--He's eventually outed as a French spy, but that doesn't change one bit of in any story or character thread so I don't know why Stirling bothered.)--show us some parts of Venus: a tour of Kartahown, and of the farmland surrounding it, and of the wilderness surrounding that. The planet is inhabited by a mix of mammals and dinosaurs who interact in a very active ecosystem indeed. The animals are very hard for the primative human societies to control. Even the space-farers have some trouble with them, though they've perfected a method for hardwiring large dinosaurs' brains to turn them into beasts of burden. (A theme of this book is that it costs a fortune to send anything from one planet to the next; in fact, nothing can bear the cost except perhaps information. That might be one thing saving the Venusians from colonialism. But the astronauts are under intense pressure to make do with whatever is available locally rather than ship anything that's not absolutely essential over from Earth.) Some of the animal species are a bit exotic--the preferred riding animal is something that sounds vaguely like a horse-shaped bear--but most of the planet's indigenous species are so close to Earth species that biologists are theorizing life was introduced to Venus from Earth by some ancient space-faring civilization--the Lords of Creation!
Meanwhile the commies are trying to bring a crate of Kalashnikovs to their base, which is a violation of some treaty. The ship that's carrying it crashes somehow or other, and many thousands of miles from either Earth base. It's on the other end of the planet's major continent--in what the Soviets have declared an "exclusion zone," which is where their probe landed in the 60s. (American characters sometimes wonder why the communists made their base so far from where the probe came down. The Soviets found something frightening there, as we'll soon see. . . . )
The commies must recover the cargo and any survivors (there's one survivor, a Lithuanian) from the crash site, but they can't get there themselves so they ask the Americans to send an airship. To make it worth the Americans' while they bribe them with all-important information. It's an insanely dangerous mission since they'll be crossing thousands of miles of uncharted wilderness in a BLIMP! The mission will consist of the Lithuanian's wife (on loan from the communist base), our three protagonists, and a more senior American officer who, despite being in command, is the only character who has not been developed to the point that we're supposed to care about him, and thus couldn't be more doomed if he were accompanying Kirk, Spock, and McCoy on an away team mission.
They eventually get to the crash site, without their commander of course and with their balloon destroyed in a storm. They're attacked by Kalashnikov-toting Neanderthals in whose company we see the Lithuanian. But the Lithuanian's acting really, really weird.
Our heroes are rescued by a human tribe ruled by the daughter of the woman who saw the Soviet probe in the prologue, who is just as sensual as her mother was. We get more exposition of Venusian culture, which is sheer delight for SF fans (and who else would be reading this?) and we learn that they once had some sort of magic diadem that the rulers of their tribe could wear to commune with the spirits or something. But the Soviet probe (not that they knew it as such, of course) landed in the middle of a battle in which the Neanderthals conquered the tribe, took their lands and their diadem. Along the way things happen, things to facilitate understanding between these humans from different cultures who speak different languages and have incompatible world views, which make the scientifically-minded Americans aware of something very fishy going on. And the French spy determines that this tribe is speaking an Indo-European language, which means they come from Earth and were brought to Venus by who knows who within the last few millennia. So some super-advanced space-faring civilization has been interfering in human history, and the plot of the story, which has been hinted at throughout to this point, finally takes center stage. (When I read that, I actually realized there'd been no plot to speak of through two thirds of the book and that I'd been enjoying the setting too much even to notice!)
Ah, the princess gets captured by the Neanderthals and Vitrak leads her people on a rescue mission. The diadem gets recovered but the tribe has been convinced that whatever gods inhabit it are in fact malevolent, which means there's no point to their existence any longer. So Vitrak suggests they move with him to the US base, which is good because the two of them have fallen in love. They cross the continent by foot over a period of two years and along the way Vitrak and the princess have a son, thus proving (which they, umm, already had) that Earth and Venus humans are the same species. The black woman and the French spy also have a child. It's a very pat ending, yes.
But the mystery around the nature of the Lords of Creation and their diadem continues to swirl. The connection between the crown and the ancient civilization that's been screwing around in the solar system has been made, and our interest has been primed for more information about them.
And what of the Lithuanian? The ancients have taken control of his mind quite thoroughly indeed. He and his wife appeared to be lost in the collapse of some cave, but in the epilogue he awakes in an impossibly ancient throne room with a dead body on the throne. He recognizes the body--and the living person who comes in and threatens his life--as Martian, and we're set up for the sequel, where the nature of the Lords of Creation will be exposed.
Originally one year was supposed to elapse between the release of the two books. The second book's release date was pushed back an additional four months. I spent sixteen months absolutely craving the conclusion of the story. Along the way, to sate my appetite, I sought out other books somehow resembling pulp SF (including Turtledove's A World of Difference, which I'll review for you one of these days), then went back to the original master, Burroughs, and from him developed a renewed interest in the history of SF that carried me through Asimov and Heinlein. It was a wonderful journey, but I kept coming back to my veritable yearning for more Lords of Creation. I don't think I've ever anticipated a book so easily in my life. I had moved to Korea before it came out, and newly-released books in the Anglosphere usually don't appear here till they've been out for a while. So I let my family know that it was imperative they pick it up for me immediately and sent it to me by the quickest method possible.
In the Courts of the Crimson Kings didn't quite live up to what I'd wanted, but in a way that's beside the point. The fact that one book can have me dying to read its sequel like that is all the evidence I need that The Sky People (despite some flaws which I identified) does everything it needs to do, and perfectly.
Summary of The Sky PeopleMarc Vitrac was born in Louisiana in the early 1960's, about the time the first interplanetary probes delivered the news that Mars and Venus were teeming with life--even human life. At that point, the "Space Race" became the central preoccupation of the great powers of the world. Now, in 1988, Marc has been assigned to Jamestown, the US-Commonwealth base on Venus, near the great Venusian city of Kartahown. Set in a countryside swarming with sabertooths and dinosaurs, Jamestown is home to a small band of American and allied scientist-adventurers. But there are flies in this ointment - and not only the Venusian dragonflies, with their yard-wide wings. The biologists studying Venus's life are puzzled by the way it not only resembles that on Earth, but is virtually identical to it. The EastBloc has its own base at Cosmograd, in the highlands to the south, and relations are frosty. And attractive young geologist Cynthia Whitlock seems impervious to Marc's Cajun charm. Meanwhile, at the western end of the continent, Teesa of the Cloud Mountain People leads her tribe in a conflict with the Neanderthal-like beastmen who have seized her folk's sacred caves. Then an EastBloc shuttle crashes nearby, and the beastmen acquire new knowledge? and AK47's. Jamestown sends its long-range blimp to rescue the downed EastBloc cosmonauts, little suspecting that the answer to the jungle planet's mysteries may lie there, among tribal conflicts and traces of a power that made Earth's vaunted science seem as primitive as the tribesfolk's blowguns. As if that weren't enough, there's an enemy agent on board the airship? Extravagant and effervescent, The Sky People is alternate-history SF adventure at its best.
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