Review
Part II of the big, ambitious trilogy begun with Helliconia Spring (1981), a series which - with its maze of observers and observed, its medieval setting - resembles a cross between Report on Probability A and The Malacia Tapestry. Helliconia, a planet with two suns, where the seasons last for centuries, is now well into its scorching summer; the humans are stuck in a medieval, religion-dominated, city-state rut, while the phagors (their age-old, shaggy, sapient rivals) are mostly hated and feared. And this time the plot revolves around the unpredictable King of Borlien - who, threatened by barbarians, resolves to cement an alliance with neighboring Oldorando by divorcing his loving, popular queen to marry a child princess: it's a delicate arrangement complicated by the devious interference of the seafaring Sibornalese and the holy Pannoval empire. Mean-while, the crew of the orbiting satellite Avernus are televising the proceedings - and themselves - back to distant Earth. (Completely isolated, losing their grip on reality, the Avernians every year send an eager volunteer down to Helliconia - where, thanks to the virus that mediates the natives' changeover from cold to heat adaptation, they face swift, certain death.) And, smaller in scope than the first volume, this is a steadier installment - with churning power politics, wide panoramas, and characters in better focus. . . even if Aldiss' Helliconia remains more impressive than fully alive or involving. (Kirkus Reviews)
Product Description
This is the second part of the epic science fiction trilogy "The Helliconia Trilogy".
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.