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Greg Bear

Reviewed by Marion Deeds
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Greg Bear Greg Bear is the author of more than thirty books of science fiction and fantasy. Awarded two Hugos and five Nebulas for his fiction, one of two authors to win a Nebula in every category, Bear has been called the “Best working writer of hard science fiction” by The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Bear has served on political and scientific action committees and has advised Microsoft Corporation, the U.S. Army, the CIA, Sandia National Laboratories, Callison Architecture, Inc., Homeland Security,  and other agencies. Learn more at Greg Bear's website.

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Songs of Earth and Power — (1984-1986) Publisher: There is a song you dare not sing — a melody that you dare not play, a concerto that you dare not hear: It is called a Song of Power. It is a gateway to another world — a gate that will lock behind you as you pass, barring you from the Earth forever. Resist at all cost. For it is a world of great danger and great beauty — and it is not good to be human in the Realm of the Sidhe.


Greg Bear Songs of Earth and Power 1. The Infinity Concerto (1984) 2. The Serpent Mage (1986)
Greg Bear Songs of Earth and Power 1. The Infinity Concerto (1984) 2. The Serpent Mage (1986)
Omnibus edition

Greg Bear Songs of Earth and Power 1. The Infinity ConcertoThe Infinity Concerto

Greg Bear Songs of Earth and Power 1. The Infinity Concerto (1984) 2. The Serpent Mage (1986)I give myself credit for finishing The Infinity Concerto, the first book of Songs of Earth and Power, written by Greg Bear in 1986. The Infinity Concerto has a compelling opening chapter but fails to deliver on that chapter’s promise.

Michael Perrin, the book’s main character, is a sixteen-year-old boy living in southern California, an only child who wants to be a poet. At a family party his father introduces him to the composer Arno Waltiri. Waltiri is a man with a strange story about another man, Clarkham, who persuaded Waltiri to write a concerto. Shortly after it was played for the first and only time, people began to disappear. Over time, twenty people who were in the audience vanished from Earth.

Waltiri gives Michael a book, a key and a set of mysterious instructions. Then he dies. One midnight after his death Michael takes the book and the key and follows the enigmatic instructions he was left. He winds up on the Blasted Plain, in a world that is not Earth. This is the same place the twenty concert-goers, and other humans, have been drawn to.

Michael soon discovers that humans are rare in this world, and for the most part, kept captive on the Pact Lands, along with the mixed breed Sidhe-humans called Breeds. The Sidhe correspond to fairies or elves, and they hate humanity. Michael is apparently a pawn in an undeclared war between the Sidhe followers of the god Adonna, and the Council of Eleu. He is sent to the magical Crane Women to be trained in martial arts and other magical combat. Before he arrives at the home of the Crane Women, he is confronted by Alyons, a Sidhe who is charged with policing the humans.

The book follows Michael’s grueling magical training. When the Pact Lands humans stage an unsuccessful revolt, Michael lures Alyons into a death-trap and kills him. Michael then makes his way across the Blasted Plain and crosses its border. Earlier, he made this trip with the Crane Women. It was a harsh, devastating trip and the women needed a magical powder to protect them. This time Michael seems to cross the plain with no magical help at all. At the border he is visited by the shade of Alyons and inherits his Sidhe steed. He follows the river, meets several interesting characters, and begins to get more information about the original Sidhe-human war and the war of the Isomage, who was known on Earth as Clarkham. Ultimately, Michael must find Clarkham and decide whose side he wants to join.

There is a lot of poetry in the book, particularly in the first third, where Michael attends a ritual kaeli where the stories of the Sidhe and Breeds are told in verse. You must read the verses in order to understand the back-story. Later, Coleridge’s incomplete poem “Xanadu” becomes a critical piece of the plot. Bear’s Coleridge pastiche near the end of the book is quite well done.

There is nothing inherently wrong with the plot here, and the world is interesting, but Michael is hard to like. When a Breed woman with whom Michael is involved attempts to send him magically back to Earth, she is killed in the process. Michael spends about one sentence grieving for her. Later in the book, Michael assesses Nikolai, who was his helper in the Sidhe city: “Nikolai was obviously not competent enough to be anything but a spectator in this game.” While Michael does become smarter, he never becomes compassionate or loyal.

And at times the prose is just incomprehensible. Bear describes a young human woman wearing a blouse that is “white and cottony, cut short around her shoulders.” Hunh? Does he mean short-sleeved? In a later scene, Lamia “rolled her hips and dragged her legs to the middle of the room.” Contrary to that image, Lamia’s legs do not detach from her body. Odd and unnecessary point-of-view shifts happen without warning, often only for a sentence or two, sometimes only from close third person with Michael to third person omniscient, meaning Bear tells instead of showing.

Nestled alongside these awkward passages are descriptions of great beauty and originality, as when Bear describes Lin Pao Tai’s palace, the Snow Faces or Clarkham’s pleasure dome. Many of the physical descriptions in the book are crisp, grounded, and quite lovely.

The connection between the concerto and this world is eventually explained, as is the importance of poetry. The idea that music and words contain power is not new; Bear plays with it somewhat, actually creating a concept that is somewhat confusing, since apparently a Song of Power can be just about anything.

The good news about all of this is that Bear matured as a writer, winning a Nebula in 2000 for Darwin’s Radio. Infinity Concerto gives us an idea of how far he has traveled. —Marion Deeds

Selected Story Collections

Wind From a Burning Woman
— (1983) Publisher: Within a distant nebula known as the Medusa, a bitter interstellar conflict rages between emergent spacefaring humans and the aging protoplasmic Senexi. In the midst of this struggle are born two humans, Prufrax and Clevo. They meet, they fall in love, and between sequences of savage combat with Senexi, they explore the bloody history of their civilization. In addition to Nebula Award-winning nouvelle "Hardfought, " Greg Bear's collection Greg Bear Wind from a Burning Womancontains the following tales of science fiction and fantasy: "The Wind from a Burning Woman, " "The White Horse Child, " "Petra, " "Scattershot" and "Mandala."


SFF book reviews Greg Bear Wind from a Burning WomanThe Wind From a Burning Woman

I don’t think early Greg Bear and I are a good match. I did not finish The Wind From a Burning Woman, a collection of short stories from the late 1970s and early 1980s. That may be part of the problem. Maybe these stories are just dated.

Bear seems to be a “writer of ideas,” and several of these tales feature fascinating “what-ifs” or technological wonders, like an asteroid shaped into a deep-space vessel, a surrealistic cathedral in a world where God has definitively Died, or a walking city. Unfortunately, problems with characters and prose undercut the gadgets or the thought exercises.

There are six stories in the book. I read five:

  • In “The Wind From a Burning Woman,” a desperate woman threatens Earth’s draconian nanny-government with an act of global terrorism in order to force out the truth.
  • “White Horse Child” is a sweet and familiar story about imagination, and those who fear it.
  • “Petra” explores life after God has died, through the eyes of a half human gargoyle.
  • “Scattershot” follows a woman and her teddy bear companion through a starship that exists in multiple realities.
  • In “Mandala,” on a distant planet a thousand years in the future, Jeshua, exiled from his village, tries to find his way into a walking city, in order to get a bigger penis. I’m not making a socio-political comment or speaking symbolically. This does seem to be his mission.

“White Horse Child” is a traditional tale. A young boy, growing up on a farm that is having financial trouble, meets some strange people, a man and then a woman, who want to trade stories with him. The boy is intrigued, but his parents are frightened. They know these two people. The people came to the boy’s uncle years ago, and now he is “living in sin, writing for those hell-spawned girlie magazines!” The boy’s mother calls in the big guns: Great-Aunt Sibyl, a fundamentalist whose proudest achievement was getting books removed from a local library shelves. The battle is on. The story is not new, but the writing is grounded and crisp; it gives us a good sense of country life and life with a lot of siblings.

“Petra”: After the Death of God, the thoughts of humanity were without control and imaginings became real. Stone and metal statues came to life; cities morphed into forests. In a crowded cathedral in an unnamed place, humans exist uneasily alongside stone-flesh, like our first-person narrator, half-human and half-gargoyle. What works well here is the conception of the cathedral; cavernous and claustrophobic at once; filled with echoing space and cramped hidden passages. What works nearly as well is the cohesive, convincing narrative voice. The narrator, advised by a living statue, defies the human “bishop” and changes history. “Petra” is the best story of the bunch.

Bear explains in the preface that he used “The Wind From a Burning Woman” to explore the motivations of terrorism. I do not think this story succeeds. Giani Turco has a score to settle with Earth’s over-controlling government, who sabotaged her grandfather’s project to take the asteroid-shop Psyche into deep space. Turco has landed on the abandoned ship and gathered evidence of the sabotage, but instead of going public, she threatens to crash the chunk of space-rock into Earth unless the bureaucrats admit their sabotage. As a terrorist, Turco is not compelling. She cries a lot, clambers in and out of the Psyche ship and manages once to lock herself outside. Surprisingly, the plot does not depend on her incompetence; things just go wrong by themselves. Because Turco’s act is so extreme, her motivations have to be powerful and believable, and that’s just not shown here. I do know that I am writing this across the vast and devastating historical divide of the attack on the World Trade Towers. Perhaps because we have thought so much more about terrorism since then, the need for Turco to be real is even more critical.

Characterization is not the only problem with this story. It skitters among point-of-view shifts like an anxious Yorkshire terrier. In a 33 page story I counted 20 POV shifts, and I’m giving Bear the benefit of the doubt on at least two. In a novel, I’ll commit to POV shifts because I’m in it for the long haul, so to speak — but in 33 pages? Forcing me to “reset” every page and a half is jarring and distracting. The lack of POV control leads to some cringe-inducing passages such as: “She was a tough one. How would he outwit her? He smiled grimly at his chutzpah for even thinking he could.”

“The teddy bear spoke excellent Mandarin.” That is a great opening sentence, and it starts off “Scattershot.” The story has some fine humor as we follow Geneva and her teddy bear companion Sonok through a ship that has been struck by a dimensional disrupter. Despite the constant chaotic changes to the ship, Geneva never seems to be moving away from danger or toward reward. By the end, when all is revealed, I discovered I didn’t care very much.

“Mandala,” like Psyche in the title story, is a marvelous invention, a city that might be sentient, but is definitely ambulatory. All of the cities on the planet of God-in-Battle move around, and they all evicted humans about a thousand years ago. Jeshua is young, strong and smart, but his genitals never developed correctly, so he is cast out of his village because he can’t father children. He decides that one of the cities can help him and sets out on a quest. Soon he hooks up with a “city chaser” named Thinner, who says he can get Jeshua into the city of Mandala. Thinner tells him that there is a human girl already there. Jeshua soon figures out that Thinner is not what he claims, and that the human eviction from the cities was not what he was raised to believe. Jeshua does find easy entrance into the city and the descriptions, if rather sterile, are pretty. Jeshua does get a new penis, and he does meet “the girl,” but the story does not go exactly as expected. Honestly, “Mandala” might have been a breathtakingly original story that has been overtaken by four decades and the whole sub-genre of the New Weird. Still, anachronisms and comparisons of “the girl” to prey animals tripped me up. In one instance, she “darted to one side like a deer.” I wasn’t aware there were deer on God-in-Battle, but maybe I missed it. At another point she “freezes like a jacklighted animal.” Really? They sneak up on animals at night on God-in-Battle, and blind them with flashlights? Why isn’t this character compared to a native species? For someone whose strength is his original ideas, Bear stints on his world-building here.

I did not read “Hardfought.” I couldn’t muster the enthusiasm.

In 1983, I might have struggled through this collection and rejoiced that two of the stories had female main characters. In 1983, I also wore leg warmers when I wasn’t working out. Things do go out of fashion. I think The Wind from a Burning Woman would be a valuable item in a 1980s time capsule, next to the Flock of Seagulls eight-track and the tiny disco-ball. —Marion Deeds


Greg Bear's Fantasies: Six stories in old paradigmsBear's Fantasies: Six stories in old paradigms — (1992) Publisher: Greg Bear has been called the "best working writer of science fiction" by The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. He has been awarded two Hugo and four Nebula Awards, and holds the distinction of being one of two authors to win a Nebula in every category. His novel Darwin's Radio, published by Ballantine Books, won the Nebula Award for "Best Novel of 2000," and was honored with the prestigious Endeavor Award. His novels and short stories have been translated into fifteen languages.


Sleepside: The Collected Fantasies of Greg Bear — (2004) Publisher: Features the stories "Webster," "The White Horse Child," "Sleepside Story," "Dead Run," "Through Road No Whither," and "Petra." Also includes a new introduction by the author: "On Losing the Taint of Being a Cannibal."

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