Series: Book 1 in the Pliocene Exile series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fantasy, Locus Award, Lang:en
Summary
In the year 2034, Theo Quderian, a
French physicist, made an amusing but impractical discovery:
the means to use a one-way, fixed-focus time warp that opened
into a place in the Rhone River valley during the idyllic
Pliocene Epoch, six million years ago. But, as time went on, a certain
usefulness developed. The misfits and mavericks of the future
— many of them brilliant people — began to seek
this exit door to a mysterious past. In 2110, a particularly strange and
interesting group was preparing to make the journey — a
starship captain, a girl athlete, a paleontologist, a woman
priest, and others who had reason to flee the technological
perfection of twenty-second-century life. Thus begins this dazzling fantasy
novel that invites comparisons with the work of J.R.R.
Tolkien, Arthur C. Clarke, and Ursula Le Quin. It opens up a
whole world of wonder, not in far-flung galaxies but in our
own distant past on Earth — a world that will captivate
not only science-fiction and fantasy fans but also those who
enjoy literate thrillers. The group that passes through the
time-portal finds an unforeseen strangeness on the other
side. Far from being uninhabited, Pliocene
Europe is the home of two warring races from another planet.
There is the knightly race of the Tanu — handsome,
arrogant, and possessing vast powers of psychokinesis and
telepathy. And there is the outcast race of Firvulag —
dwarfish, malev-o olent, and gifted with their own
supernormal skills. Taken captive by the Tanu and transported
through the primordial European landscape, the humans manage
to break free, join in an uneasy alliance with the
forest-dwelling Firvulag, and, finally, launch an attack
against the Tanu city of light on the banks of a river that,
eons later, would be called the Rhine. Myth and legend, wit and violence,
speculative science and breathtaking imagination mingle in
this romantic fantasy, which is the first volume in a series
about the exile world.
1982 Locus Award