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Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1) 
Valentine's journey is a long one, a tour through a series of magnificent environments. Fields of predatory plants give way to impossibly wide rivers, chalk-cliffed islands and unforgiving deserts. The prose is unrelentingly dreamlike—no accident given that on Majipoor, dreams rule the minds of great and humble alike.
Originally serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in four parts: November 1979, December 1979, January 1980 and February 1980.
Robert Silverberg is one of the greats of sci-fi literature, he is, to my mind, criminally underrated today, several Hugo and Nebula wins notwithstanding. I always start my Silverberg reviews along this line. If you have read any of those, this kind of intro must be getting old. So enough of that then!And then, after walking all day through a golden haze of humid warmth that gathered about him like fine wet fleece, Valentine came to a great ridge of outcropping white stone overlooking the city
A feast for the senses as well as the intellect, Silverberg has created a vast world of wonder, part science fiction, part fantasy, part fairy tale, with a just enough of a touch of 1970s sci-fi sexiness. The audio is impeccably narrated by Stefan Rudnicki, whose deep, rich tones are the perfect pairing for a deep, rich novel. Silverberg is a master world builder; you will find few points to quibble on in his gigantic world. What's nice about this series (at least the first three in the series;

I read this an inestimably long time ago. The stars are in memory of my memory.
Meh. This book reads like a dumbed-down version of David Eddings' Belgariad, which is no compliment. Silverberg has absolutely no concrete concept of quantity. He writes of an "agrarian society" which contains "a small village of perhaps eleven million people." Lord Valentine marches 2,000 miles with an army of 50,000 in less than a month. (And it wasn't until that army reached 30,000 or so that Lord Valentine decided he couldn't handle all its attendant administrivia and made his best friends -
i first read this when i was less than half my current age, re-read it many times over the next ten years, and still remember it fondly. i was immersed in the setting of majipoor, loved the vaguely implied science fiction framework around a fantasy tale, liked the feel of the character interactions, felt like i would recognize the strange flavors of the foods silverberg described. i bought a few extra copies to give to others, when i discovered that they needed to read it, too. i don't have any
This may have been the first Silverberg story I read. Almost certainly the first novel, and I think it's the best work of his that I've read (and a clear step above others in the series). I still have the paperback I bought around the time this first came out - despite the fact that I foolishly left it out, and some SOB apparently showed off by ripping it partly in half. I don't know what s/he learned. I learned never to leave books around people who can read, but are too foolish to want to.
Robert Silverberg
Paperback | Pages: 506 pages Rating: 3.89 | 8441 Users | 331 Reviews

Itemize Books Toward Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1)
Original Title: | Lord Valentine's Castle |
ISBN: | 0061054879 (ISBN13: 9780061054877) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Lord Valentine #1, Majipoor #1 |
Characters: | Coronal Valentine |
Literary Awards: | Hugo Award Nominee for Best Novel (1981), Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel (1981), Balrog Award Nominee for Best Novel (1981) |
Description In Pursuance Of Books Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1)
Valentine, a wanderer who knows nothing except his name, finds himself on the fringes of a great city, and joins a troupe of jugglers and acrobats; gradually, he remembers that he is the Coronal Valentine, executive ruler of the vast world of Majipoor, and all its peoples, human and otherwise...Valentine's journey is a long one, a tour through a series of magnificent environments. Fields of predatory plants give way to impossibly wide rivers, chalk-cliffed islands and unforgiving deserts. The prose is unrelentingly dreamlike—no accident given that on Majipoor, dreams rule the minds of great and humble alike.
Originally serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in four parts: November 1979, December 1979, January 1980 and February 1980.
Be Specific About Containing Books Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1)
Title | : | Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1) |
Author | : | Robert Silverberg |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 506 pages |
Published | : | July 1st 1995 by Eos (first published November 1979) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Science Fiction. Fiction |
Rating Containing Books Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1)
Ratings: 3.89 From 8441 Users | 331 ReviewsEvaluation Containing Books Lord Valentine's Castle (Lord Valentine #1)
I know this is supposed to be one of the classics of modern SiFi but I just could not get into the book. The story seemed to drag and never pick up for me. Not recommendedRobert Silverberg is one of the greats of sci-fi literature, he is, to my mind, criminally underrated today, several Hugo and Nebula wins notwithstanding. I always start my Silverberg reviews along this line. If you have read any of those, this kind of intro must be getting old. So enough of that then!And then, after walking all day through a golden haze of humid warmth that gathered about him like fine wet fleece, Valentine came to a great ridge of outcropping white stone overlooking the city
A feast for the senses as well as the intellect, Silverberg has created a vast world of wonder, part science fiction, part fantasy, part fairy tale, with a just enough of a touch of 1970s sci-fi sexiness. The audio is impeccably narrated by Stefan Rudnicki, whose deep, rich tones are the perfect pairing for a deep, rich novel. Silverberg is a master world builder; you will find few points to quibble on in his gigantic world. What's nice about this series (at least the first three in the series;

I read this an inestimably long time ago. The stars are in memory of my memory.
Meh. This book reads like a dumbed-down version of David Eddings' Belgariad, which is no compliment. Silverberg has absolutely no concrete concept of quantity. He writes of an "agrarian society" which contains "a small village of perhaps eleven million people." Lord Valentine marches 2,000 miles with an army of 50,000 in less than a month. (And it wasn't until that army reached 30,000 or so that Lord Valentine decided he couldn't handle all its attendant administrivia and made his best friends -
i first read this when i was less than half my current age, re-read it many times over the next ten years, and still remember it fondly. i was immersed in the setting of majipoor, loved the vaguely implied science fiction framework around a fantasy tale, liked the feel of the character interactions, felt like i would recognize the strange flavors of the foods silverberg described. i bought a few extra copies to give to others, when i discovered that they needed to read it, too. i don't have any
This may have been the first Silverberg story I read. Almost certainly the first novel, and I think it's the best work of his that I've read (and a clear step above others in the series). I still have the paperback I bought around the time this first came out - despite the fact that I foolishly left it out, and some SOB apparently showed off by ripping it partly in half. I don't know what s/he learned. I learned never to leave books around people who can read, but are too foolish to want to.
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