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The Book Of The New Sun: Volume 2: Sword and Citadel: Sword and Citadel Vol 2 (Fantasy Masterworks)
 
 
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The Book Of The New Sun: Volume 2: Sword and Citadel: Sword and Citadel Vol 2 (Fantasy Masterworks) [Paperback]

Gene Wolfe
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
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The Book Of The New Sun: Volume 2: Sword and Citadel: Sword and Citadel Vol 2 (Fantasy Masterworks) + Sword and Citadel: The Second Half of the Book of the New Sun + Tales Of The Dying Earth (Fantasy Masterworks)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 608 pages
  • Publisher: Gollancz; paperback / softback edition (28 Dec 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1857987004
  • ISBN-13: 978-1857987003
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 3.8 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 204,194 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Gene Wolfe
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

One of the most acclaimed "science fantasies" ever, Gene Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun (1980-83) is a long, magical novel in four volumes. Shadow and Claw contains the first two, The Shadow of the Torturer and The Claw of the Conciliator, which respectively won the World Fantasy and Nebula awards.

This is the first-person narrative of Severian the lowly apprentice torturer, blessed and cursed with a photographic memory, whose travels lead him through the marvels of far-future "Urth", and who--as revealed near the beginning--eventually becomes his land's sole ruler or Autarch. On the surface it's a colourful story with all the classic ingredients: growing up, adventure, sex, betrayal, murder, exile, battle, monsters and mysteries to be solved. (Only well into book two do we realise what saved Severian's life in chapter one.) For lovers of literary allusions, they're here in plenty: a Dickensian cemetery scene, a torture-engine from Kafka, a wonderful library out of Borges and familiar fables changed by aeons of retelling. Wolfe evokes a chilly sense of time's vastness, with an age-old, much restored painting of a golden-visored "knight" who is an astronaut standing on the Moon; an ancient citadel of metal towers which are grounded spacecraft. Even the Sun is senile and dying, and so Urth needs a New Sun.

The Book of the New Sun is almost heart-breakingly good, full of riches and subtleties that improve with each rereading. It is Gene Wolfe's masterpiece and strongly recommended. --David Langford --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Book Description

Award winning quest of discovery through an Earth fantastically transformed by aeons of humanity. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

28 Reviews
5 star:
 (14)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (5)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (28 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A mesmerising science fantasy tour de force, 20 April 2000
By A Customer
At one time it was common to see some run of the mill fantasy author lauded as the "the new Tolkien", either in magazine reviews or, modestly, on his or her own book jacket. Almost invariably, however, the novels themselves were disappointing parodies or imitations of Tolkien and a few other good fantasy and SF authors, lacking in originality, literary flare and, perhaps most importantly, any sense of place and atmosphere in the worlds they imagined.

Where all these writers failed Gene Wolfe, in his four part "Book of the New Sun" succeeded majestically. Although the book is in some senses clearly derivative of other SF works, most notably Jack Vance's "Dying Earth Series, Wolfe draws largely on classical history to and mythology to create and boundlessly vast world that is all the more mysterious and fascinating for the fact that it is almost as strange and new to Wolfe's hero, Severian, as it is to the reader.

Expelled from his place amongst the Guild of the Seekers for Truth and Penitence (commonly "The Torturers") Severian is obliged to travel on foot to his place of exile. The journey is his first time away from the citadel at the centre of the colossal but decaying metropolis Nessus (Rome, Contantinople?). The reader, therefore, has the chance to discover the world (Earth many millennia in the future) with the books protagonist. The result is a layering of reality not unlike that achieved by Ridley Scott in his early films, most notably Blade Runner. The universe of the story is not composed of a few truths and verities that are presented to reader as cast in stone. As in our own world room is left for varying shade of opinion and perception, distortion, half truths and half remembered truths. Reading the book Severian's world and its inner logic seems to the reader to become more tangible than his or her own.

It is precisely here that Wolfe suceeds were so many other fantasy and science fantasy authors have failed. In creating a world that is nothing like Tolkien's but has a firm basis in layers of history, mythology and in Wolfe's own imagination, the writer comes closer than any other author (certainly any author I've read) in crafting a novel comparable to Tolkien's precisely because of it is nothing like anything that Tolkien wrote, except in the quality of Wolfe's writing, the breadth of his sources and the sweep of his imagination.

If you like good fantasy read this book. Even if you don't normally like fantasy but are enjoy history, myth or simply captivatingly good writing, read this book. In general, just read this book!

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of those books to cherish... and reread often., 26 Jan 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Book Of The New Sun: Volume 2: Sword and Citadel: Sword and Citadel Vol 2 (Fantasy Masterworks) (Paperback)
I've just finished reading this book, and i'm still feeling this kind of fever that seems to come when i read books so fantastically crafted that even when i finish reading them, it's as if i was still inside the world that was created, and living again some part of it in my mind, so i can't stop thinking about them even when i'm on the surface thinking of something else.

I think to try to tell here too much of the story would be to spoil the books to any who read them, and so i'll try not to.

The book, which contains the last two from the tetralogy "The Book of the Sun", that begun with "Shadow and Claw", tells the story of Severian, a boy raised on earth in a future so distant from us that the sun is but a dying star, all resources have been exausted ages ago, and our age is remembered by nothing but almost forgotten myths. The books are written as an autobiography, in which Severian tells us his adventures from a humble beginning in the long decaying Citadel of Nessus and his Guild, commonly known as the Torturers, and a future so strange he would never have imagined it. Along the way we get to discover the world in which he lives at the same pace he does, and to discover new mysteries faster than answers to them (as is usual).

This is one (or the best) books i've ever read, and i'm an ardent reader of science fiction and fantasy. I'm tempted to commit an heresy, and quite plainly state that i did enjoyed this book far more than i did The Lord of The Rings, although i love all Tolkien's books and have read most of them. Perhaps that was because i felt i could relate more with this story than his, because although it has elements one could call simply fantasy, it deals with a possible future, and despite all the cryptic changes in the fabric of society, culture and religion, people within still have the same yearnings and desires, so that even in that almost alien world one feels that might happen.

I think i've wrote too long a review already, but you're just searching for the bottom line, i'll give it now: If you like science fiction, fantasy, or if you just like books that are true works of art, read this. It won't let you down.

Just make sure you have ample time to read... you won't be able to put it down until the end! ;^)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great but wierd, 16 May 2000
By 
J. Russell - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a great book, but I'm not sure if it can really be described as fantasy. For me it works precisely because it is SF. If part of the aim in sci-fi is to do new and surprising things then Wolfe succeeds big time. His genius is in rendering the (extremely) far-future totally convincing, and paradoxically this is acheived by making it utterly alien. Where most SF basically transfers our own concerns into a technologically or socially 'advanced' society, Wolfe makes Severian and his world virtually incomprehensible. At various points in the novel space and time travel, teleportation, genetic engineering and biomechanics all feature, but they are all depicted as ancient, decaying and irrelevant. Furthermore, Wolfe fills the text with half remembered myths and historical misinterpretations from our own age and the millenia which have followed. Attempting to work out the possible source of these stories, and solving the other mysteries of the text, is great, and turns the reader into a kind of textual detective.

On the downside, the sheer 'strangeness' of this future can be quite offputting, as can Wolfe's laboured use of language. While both of these factors are vital to the novel's structure, they do take a bit of getting used to...

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