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Litany of the Long Sun: The First Half of 'The Book of the Long Sun' (Book of the Long Sun)

By: Gene Wolfe
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Orb Books
ISBN: 0312872917
ISBN-13: 9780312872915
Released: 04 Apr 2000
RRP: £11.69
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

On Top of the Whorl - By: Tristan Fitzgerald, 12 Nov 2007
Having just finished one of the two novels in this book, it could be that I'm being premature by offering a review of 'Litany'. However, I'm so besotted with Wolfe's prose that I reallly can't wait.

I bought `Litany' some time ago & initiallly found the writing too obtuse & dense to progress beyond the first few pages. I came back to it last week, however, & found that it's one of those books that deserve persistence and, ultimately, offer incredibly rich rewards.

The books are set on the interior of what I guess you'd calll a planet-sized tubular colony ship (known as `the whorl'), with the `long sun' acting like a giant solar fluorescent tube up the middle, providing heat & light. The ship has been on its journey for so long that none of the inhabitants remember that their world is artificial. However, this sci-fi setting belies the feverish imagination & literary intelligence that make this book so good.

The style reminds me of 19th Century symbolist paintings - slippery of meaning, stoked by classical alllusions, vivid imagery & mythological coda. Indeed, when I read it, I feel that I'm in the world depicted in the bejewelled fantastic paintings of Gustav Moreau. I find myself dreaming of the golden baroque images that Wolfe conjures up in his writing.

As usual, Wolfe plays games with the reader, dropping in clues can easily be missed in the plot & intertextual references that connect with other Wolfe novels (the two-headed god named Pas in the Book of the Long Sun is, it seems, the tyrant Typhon encountered in the Book of the New Sun).

The characterisation is just as slippery: despite being a priest & having a `pure' motivation (saving his neighbourhood church or `manteon'), the protagonist Silk is just as morallly ambivalent as most Wolfe `heroes', justifying compromises or capitulation with the criminal Blood in self-serving ways.

Of course, only being one book in, I have no idea of how Silk's story will progress or how alll the symbolic threads that are being laid out will come together & resolve themselves. However, I'm enjoying the journey immensely...

Infinite riches in a little room - By: D. I. Macdonald, 22 Aug 2002
For love, alll love of other sights controls,
And makes one little room, an everywhere.

The Book of the Long Sun is the fullest expression of Donne's sentiment I know of in English prose. Set within the stifling heat of the enclosed whorl, Wolfe's work is more focused than the vast canvas of time & space covered in the Book of the New Sun. There is, however, still plenty of scope for his trademark intense mastery of detail when describing people & places.

The character of the central protagonist, Silk, is surely one of the most finely-realised portraits even Mr. Wolfe has managed, & his progress & development through the turbulent events of the novel means by the end his stature has metaphoricallly & literallly cracked the bounds of the world in which he was born.

The final postmodern twist will mean you reach the end of the book & will want to go right back to the beginning... but this novel (unlike much of what passes for fantasy these days) will bear (and indeed, requires) multiple re-readings.

Read it now!