"Dies the Fire"
Nov. 17th, 2006 03:09 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I'm currently in the middle of S. M. Stirling's Dies the Fire. I doubt I'll do a full review; it's entertaining enough, but kind of run-of-the-mill - there's not much here that wasn't in Lucifer's Hammer, or in any of a number of similar works. I do want to mention a few things that I've noticed, however.
- It's remarkable how many of the characters here have some kind of personal connection to characters from the Nantucket trilogy. I've seen mentions of John Martin and the Walkers - plainly the family of the warlord William; one of the characters is an Arnstein; and there've been one or two other fainter connections.
- At one point, one of the characters thinks, Home isn't a place. Home is people. Do I need to mention that Stirling was on the Bujold list for a while?
- There is a scene involving a dog looking longingly at a marrowbone while lying, stomach distended, on top of a pile of other bones. Stirling used that same image, memorably, in the third of the Nantucket books.