mjn@panda.UUCP (Mark J. Norton) (02/27/85)
It would seem that just about all of Jack Chalker's books have been discussed recently with the exception of The Soul Rider trilogy. Since I've just completed the last book, I will round out the dialog. ** Slight Spoiler ** These three books concern a strange sort of place divided into two basic regions: flux and anchor. Flux is basically what it sounds like, a place of constant change, engergy floating around as a foggy cloud, which can be manipulated by people with certain talents. Anchor, on the other hand, is stablity. These are small regions (islands, almost) where conditions are close to Earth-norm. Anchor is home to normal people and technology. Flux contains wizards, mutated monsters and magic. The Soul Rider trilogy is a tale of Science vs. Magic. Chalker throws in a liberal dose of represive religions, preaching on the roles of the sexes in society, and that men would be gods given 2/3rds of a chance. There are even elements of the Western Novel. -- Summary and Dispositon -- As with some of Chalker's other work, intresting ideas are raise. Readers of this newsgroup will be intriqued by the part computers play the finale. Some philosophy is expounded and examined. Finally, the Soul Riders themselves and their origin are fun ideas. The ideas are good and the books may be worth reading for that alone. I found the first volume to be exicting, the second OK, and the last boring. Characters flip/flop several times, major players do things that just don't seem plausible. Overall, the books lack some in continuity. That this is deliberate on Jack's part doesn't make up for it. Finally, if you are feministically inclined, you will be truly offended by some parts of the story. Mark J. Norton decvax!genrad!{panda | teddy}!mjn