From Publishers Weekly
In the distant future the seeds of humanity are scattered so far and wide throughout the galactic frontier that Earth's Metastatic government can only maintain control via a network of starships. Maaron Denthurion is a Televox, a powerful representative who is preserved aboard the Naglfar as digitized computer data and chemically reincarnated when he arrives at the planet Olam. Though at first glance the citizens of this brave new world seem to enjoy the healthy benefits of a utopian society, Denthurion learns that the enslavement of an intelligent species--called the Hodai--and oppression of a neo-Christian cult known as the Shearah are also prevalent. When Denthurion is kidnapped by the Shearah, the government panics: a Televox, if he is displeased, has the authority to nuke an entire planet. After seducing a young revolutionary, Denthurion escapes his captors and must ultimately decide what judgment to pass on Olam. Though Barton (coauthor of Iris ) repeatedly evokes the Norse gods--Denthurion dreams of living in Asgard and the ship's computer is named Odin--this novel reads like a theatrical, if somewhat heavy, space opera.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Ingram
Maaron Denthurion, a Televox with the mission to preserve the Human Metastable Order, journeys to Olam, where amid turmoil, enslavement, religious cults, and superstition he must determine the fate of the planet and its inhabitants.