Queen of Candesce

Publisher’s Weekly had this to say:

“Schroeder’s ambitious sequel to 2006’s Sun of Suns further explores Virga, the vast enclosed realm containing a miniature cosmos of floating worlds, wheellike townships and intriguing mysteries about the construct’s origins and creators. Heated and lit by numerous artificial suns, the individual populations have evolved on divergent paths. When the delightfully amoral Venera Fanning finds herself on Spyre, an ancient and decaying cylindrical world that’s slowly breaking apart, and realizes the Key of Candesce could not only unlock the secrets of a long-lost technology but also destroy entire worlds, she inadvertently disrupts Spyre’s delicate political balance and rigid cultural mores and ignites a revolution. Comparable to classic SF epics like John Varley’s Gaean trilogy and Jack L. Chalker’s Well of Souls series, Schroeder’s saga is an awe-inspiring example of masterful world-building. A myriad of themes, from rogue artificial intelligences to the evolution of human bodies and culture, make this futuristic epic one to reckon with.”

  • With Queen of Candesce, Karl Schroeder's Virga saga establishes itself as an SF saga of the same order as LeGuin's Earthsea stories, Asimov's Robot stories, and Niven's Ringworld stories.

    SF Revu

  • Queen of Candesce offers a generous abundance of reading pleasure, and it confirms that Karl Schroeder belongs in the front ranks of SF world-builders.

    Scifi.com

  • SF remains the home to some of the most visionary writers of the day, and to some of the most overlooked. With Queen of Candesce, Schroeder has achieved a clockwork balance of deftly paced adventure and humour, set against an intriguing and unique vision of humanity's far future.

    The Globe and Mail

  • The ingenuity and inventiveness of Karl Schroeder's miniuniverse has ushered the acclaimed author into the ranks of leading world-builders. ...The brisk plot and vivid settings will leave readers anxiously awaiting the next installment.

    Bookmarks Magazine

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Pirate Sun