Vintage Treasures: City of Pearl by Karen Traviss

Vintage Treasures: City of Pearl by Karen Traviss

City of Pearl-small City of Pearl-back-small

Cover by Greg Bridges

Karen Traviss’s debut novel City of Pearl was a big hit here in the Black Gate offices, and it was passed around repeatedly and excitedly. We were far from the only ones who liked it — it was shortlisted for both the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel and the Philip K. Dick Award, and came in third in the 2005 Locus poll for Best First Novel. It launched her career quite effectively, and it eventually became the opening novel in the 6-volume Wess’har Wars series.

City of Pearl tells the ambitious tale of the clash of several distinct alien civilizations near Cavanagh’s Star in the year 2299. In his review of the novel and its sequel Crossing the Line at SF Site, Stuart Carter wrote:

This isn’t hard SF by any means. Although the laws of physics are largely obeyed they’re not particularly important to the story; there’s no arousing military- or techno-porn, and precious little ‘common-sense’ machismo or gung-ho soldiering. It’s worth mentioning that there are philosophical similarities with The Dispossessed, but these books are, in my opinion, even deeper and more complex than Ursula K. Le Guin’s classic, and they’re still far from over.

Another glorious aspect of these two books is that they’re almost the antithesis of everything Trek: humans haring round the universe imposing their morality and point-of-view upon anyone who can listen, and always, eventually, turning out to be right, or at least admirable. And if we’re not even admirable then at least we have bigger guns than everyone else to console ourselves with. In Karen Traviss’s universe we’re seen as being far from admirable and even further from right, and it looks like being a very hard, possibly even fatal, lesson for us to learn… If you want to read something that will leave you thinking, perhaps if you’re a fan of Ursula K. Le Guin, Kim Stanley Robinson or, more generally, of intricately gloomy English science fiction, then this series is one you want to read — I promise.

City of Pearl didn’t just hit with the critics. It is still in print, 15 years long after it was originally published; an extraordinary feat by any measure. Here’s the complete list of all six novels in the series.

[Click the images for City-sized versions.]

The Wess'har Wars-small

The other five novels in The Wess’har Wars series

The Wess’har War novels are:

City of Pearl (2004) — Campbell nominee, Philip K. Dick nominee
Crossing the Line (2004)
The World Before (2005) — Campbell Award nominee
Matriarch (2006) — Tiptree Award nominee, #14 on Locus poll for Best SF Novel
Ally (2007) — Philip K. Dick nominee
Judge (2008) — Philip K. Dick nominee

In recent years Karen Traviss has turned her attention to the lucrative world of media tie-ins. She’s written 10 Star Wars novels, including five books in the Republic Commando series, three Halo novels, and five Gears of War novels.

Star Wars Karen Traviss

The Republic Commando novels by Karen Traviss

City of Pearl was published by Eos in April 2004. It is 392 pages, priced at $6.99 in paperback and $3.99 in digital formats. The cover is by Greg Bridges.

See all our recent Vintage Treasures here.

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