© 1979 by Robert Silverberg
This is gonna sound a bit loopy, but … I think I just spent
a year on another planet.
That planet is Majipoor, larger than earth, whose vast seas
encircle a trio of just-as-vast continents.
Settled by man fourteen thousand years ago and now shared with a
half-dozen alien species (not to mention the mysterious natives, the
metamorphs), it has a rich history and a unique power structure. Billions live, love, struggle and die beneath
the just rule of the Coronal, the Pontifex, the Lady of the Isle and the King
of Dreams. Sea dragons frolic in the
oceans, semi-intelligent hominids swing from branches in jungles with
man-eating flora, wizards cast spells of varying power and a man with no memory
finds himself a juggler at a festival on the other side of the world.
This is the best fiction I’ve read all year – and I didn’t
want to read it. Twenty-five or so years
ago I bought and brought Lord Valentine’s
Castle to my folks’ weekend house in upstate New York for a solo week of
relaxing. I remember being taken by it,
reading Part I (of five), about a hundred pages, in two or three days. I so enjoyed it I fished around in the garage
and found some tennis balls and tried to teach myself juggling. But when I got back home … I never finished
it. Not sure why. I have no strong memories one way or the
other. Possibly life got in the way;
back then I was working full-time, going to school at nights, playing in my
band, and going on Round 3 with my first girlfriend.
Then I spotted Silverberg’s sequel, The Majipoor Chronicles, an anthology of tales taking place on that
strange and vivid world, in a used book store sometime in the fall of
2011. And it sat on my book shelf with
fifty other paperbacks for three long years.
I was hesitant until I lifted it up on a whim and devoured it,
instantaneously drawn into the mind of this great writer. (Review of that work, here.) As a result of my enjoyment of Chronicles, I drove to B&N, little
ones in tow, and bought the first copy of Lord
Valentine’s Castle I could find, this time determined to make it all the
way to the very end.
I burned through it, often reading fifty, sixty pages at a
clip. And now, Silverberg’s other
Majipoorean writings are on my Acquisitions List. You know, just in case you wanted to pick
something up for my birthday next month.
Why is Lord
Valentine’s Castle so good?
Let me count the ways.
The first thing that seized me was, for lack of a better
term, the “botanical” writing of the story.
Meaning the rich, vivid, sensuous descriptions of Majipoor – the woods,
the seas, the deserts, the grass beneath ones feet, the encyclopedia of strange
plants with strange names with strange and not-so-strange uses. I recall reading literary criticism of
Tolkien, how this was a major goal of his to bring Middle-earth to life:
nature-writing, describing the landscape and the vegetation and the environment
in such a pleasing and fascinating way that the reader cannot help but to see,
feel, hear himself inside this world. I
believe more so than any other contemporary writer I’ve read (with the
exception of, perhaps, George R. R. Martin’s Song of Ice and Fire novels), Silverberg comes closest to Tolkien
with this facet of his writing.
Then, the plot. Is
Valentine the juggler the Lord Valentine of the book’s title? Coronal of Majipoor, a “prime minister” of
twenty billion souls? I think the reader
knows the answer to that. The question
is, how does he remember his past, convince his new-found friends and old
allies (he appears to be in a new, completely different body), and regain what
was rightfully his, to rebalance the scales of cosmic justice? How did it happen? How can he set things to right? How can he – penniless and powerless – grasp
and accomplish all this in the span of 580 pages?
That’s for the reader to enjoy.
And in so doing, he is exposed to the majestic sweep of
history and culture as Valentine makes his way to Majipoor’s center of power,
Castle Mount. We meet different alien
species – Skandars, Ghayrogs, Vroons, Hjorts, Metamorphs. We travel over two vast continents, and
ocean, an archipelago and the circular tiered island of the Lady of
Dreams. We learn the power structure and
struggle between the Coronal / Pontifex, the Lady of the Isle, and the King of
Dreams. Dreams are an important part of
the tale, with the Lady sending nebulous blessings and the King sending
specific nightmares to punish the wicked, however he defines “wicked.” But most importantly we meet people, characters that come to life in
the space of a page, who turn the story in unanticipated directions, who
provide Valentine with the tools to accomplish his mission – even when he’s not
sure how or why or even if he should.
Finally – or firstly, for a fantasy geek like me – there are
maps. Several pages, detailed with
cities and towns and mountains and rivers.
I love maps and refer to them often when reading these fantasy stories
(as well as all the war stuff I’ve been reading over the past two or three
years). They clarify and focus the
action, help bring the setting to life, and are, uh, just damn cool. All fantasy begins with a map. I remember studying the maps of Middle-earth
as a twelve-year-old boy for hours and hours, and this is not an
exaggeration. Maps enhance, maps
enliven. Long live maps!
All in all, a great two weeks of reading. Robert Silverberg is truly a master of the
pen and the imagination and that magical ellipsis where the two meet. I have Nightwings,
The New Springtime, and The Face of the Waters on the shelf
behind me to read (the last two books will be re-reads). Can’t wait … perhaps I’ll start one in
September.
Lord
Valentine’s Castle: Grade – A+
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