The Sparrow: A Novel (The Sparrow Series)
The Sparrow: A Novel (The Sparrow Series) book cover

The Sparrow: A Novel (The Sparrow Series)

Price
$10.81
Format
Paperback
Pages
408
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0449912553
Dimensions
5.4 x 1.14 x 8.2 inches
Weight
14.7 ounces

Description

“A startling, engrossing, and moral work of fiction.” — Thexa0New York Times Book Review “Important novels leave deep cracks in our beliefs, our prejudices, and our blinders. The Sparrow is one of them.” — Entertainment Weekly “Powerful . . . The Sparrow tackles a difficult subject with grace and intelligence.” — San Francisco Chronicle “Provocative, challenging . . . recalls both Arthur C. Clarke and H. G. Wells, with a dash of Ray Bradbury for good measure.” — The Dallas Morning News “[Mary Doria] Russell shows herself to be a skillful storyteller who subtly and expertly builds suspense.” — USA Today From the Publisher This is one of my favorite books of all time, EVER!!!! And I'm not just saying that because I work here at Ballantine/Fawcett and I have to. Being in the editorial department, there are always way too many books to read and way too little time to do it in. That's why when I first overheard one of my colleagues raving about this book to someone, I didn't give it a second thought. While it's nice to know at least a little something about the current books on our list (no small feat), this book had never caught my eye as something I'd be interested in. But after the millionth time I'd heard my cohort extolling the virtues of this book to anyone who would listen, I figured I would give it a shot. I started reading it on my vacation, and it's a good thing, because I couldn't put it down to do anything else! I'm not quite sure what I can say about it that will do it justice, because it can be viewed so many different ways by different people----it's beautiful, ugly, sad, optimistic, and intensely compelling all at the same time. Suffice it to say that it's one of those once-in-a-lifetime books that just makes you stop and sit-up and think about things that you've never given second thought to before. -----J. Rendon, Editorial Assistant From the Inside Flap ONE OF ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY'S TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR"A NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENT . . . Russell shows herself to be a skillful storyteller who subtly and expertly builds suspense."--USA Today"AN EXPERIENCE NOT TO BE MISSED . . . If you have to send a group of people to a newly discovered planet to contact a totally unknown species, whom would you choose? How about four Jesuit priests, a young astronomer, a physician, her engineer husband, and a child prostitute-turned-computer-expert? That's who Mary Doria Russell sends in her new novel, The Sparrow. This motley combination of agnostics, true believers, and misfits becomes the first to explore the Alpha Centuri world of Rakhat with both enlightening and disastrous results. . . . Vivid and engaging . . . An incredible novel."--Milwaukee Journal Sentinel"POWERFUL . . . Father Emilio Sandoz [is] the only survivor of a Jesuit mission to the planet Rakhat, 'a soul . . . looking for God.' We first meet him in Italy . . . sullen and bitter. . . . But he was not always this way, as we learn through flashbacks that tell the story of the ill-fated trip. . . . The Sparrow tackles a difficult subject with grace and intelligence."--San Francisco Chronicle"SMOOTH STORYTELLING AND GORGEOUS CHARACTERIZATION . . . Important novels leave deep cracks in our beliefs, our prejudices, and our blinders. The Sparrow is one of them."--Entertainment Weekly SELECTED BY THE BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB ONE OF ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY'S TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR "A NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENT . . . Russell shows herself to be a skillful storyteller who subtly and expertly builds suspense."--USA Today "AN EXPERIENCE NOT TO BE MISSED . . . If you have to send a group of people to a newly discovered planet to contact a totally unknown species, whom would you choose? How about four Jesuit priests, a young astronomer, a physician, her engineer husband, and a child prostitute-turned-computer-expert? That's who Mary Doria Russell sends in her new novel, The Sparrow. This motley combination of agnostics, true believers, and misfits becomes the first to explore the Alpha Centuri world of Rakhat with both enlightening and disastrous results. . . . Vivid and engaging . . . An incredible novel."--Milwaukee Journal Sentinel "POWERFUL . . . Father Emilio Sandoz [is] the only survivor of a Jesuit mission to the planet Rakhat, 'a soul . . . looking for God.' We first meet him in Italy . . . sullen and bitter. . . . But he was not always this way, as we learn through flashbacks that tell the story of the ill-fated trip. . . . The Sparrow tackles a difficult subject with grace and intelligence."--San Francisco Chronicle "SMOOTH STORYTELLING AND GORGEOUS CHARACTERIZATION . . . Important novels leave deep cracks in our beliefs, our prejudices, and our blinders. The Sparrow is one of them."--Entertainment Weekly SELECTED BY THE BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB Mary Doria Russell has been called one of the most versatile writers in contemporary American literature. Widely praised for her meticulous research, fine prose, and compelling narrative drive, she is the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of The Sparrow, Children of God, A Thread of Grace, Dreamers of the Day, Doc, and Epitaph . Dr. Russell holds a Ph.D. in biological anthropology. She lives in Lyndhurst, Ohio. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Ballantine Reader's Circle: The Sparrow (Excerpt)Chapter 1 ROME: DECEMBER 2059 On December 7, 2059, Emilio Sandoz was released from the isolation ward of Salvator Mundi Hospital in the middle of the night and transported in a bread van to the Jesuit Residence at Number 5 Borgo Santo Spìrito, a few minutes' walk across St. Peter's Square from the Vatican. The next day, ignoring shouted questions and howls of journalistic outrage as he read, a Jesuit spokesman issued a short statement to the frustrated and angry media mob that had gathered outside Number 5's massive front door."To the best of our knowledge, Father Emilio Sandoz is the sole survivor of the Jesuit mission to Rakhat. Once again, we extend our thanks to the U.N., to the Contact Consortium and to the Asteroid Mining Division of Ohbayashi Corporation for making the return of Father Sandoz possible. We have no additional information regarding the fate of the Contact Consortium's crew members; they are in our prayers. Father Sandoz is too ill to question at this time and his recovery is expected to take months. Until then, there can be no further comment on the Jesuit mission or on the Contact Consortium's allegations regarding Father Sandoz's conduct on Rakhat."This was simply to buy time.It was true, of course, that Sandoz was ill. The man's whole body was bruised by the blooms of spontaneous hemorrhages where tiny blood vessel walls had breached and spilled their contents under his skin. His gums had stopped bleeding, but it would be a long while before he could eat normally. Eventually, something would have to be done about his hands.Now, however, the combined effects of scurvy, anemia and exhaustion kept him asleep twenty hours out of the day. When awake, he lay motionless, coiled like a fetus and almost as helpless.The door to his small room was nearly always left open in those early weeks. One afternoon, thinking to prevent Father Sandoz from being disturbed while the hallway floor was polished, Brother Edward Behr closed it, despite warnings about this from the Salvator Mundi staff. Sandoz happened to wake up and found himself shut in. Brother Edward did not repeat the mistake.Vincenzo Giuliani, the Father General of the Society of Jesus, went each morning to look in on the man. He had no idea if Sandoz was aware of being observed; it was a familiar feeling. When very young, when the Father General was just plain Vince Giuliani, he had been fascinated by Emilio Sandoz, who was a year ahead of Giuliani during the decade-long process of priestly formation. A strange boy, Sandoz. A puzzling man. Vincenzo Giuliani had made a statesman's career of understanding other men, but he had never understood this one.Gazing at Emilio, sick now and almost mute, Giuliani knew that Sandoz was unlikely to give up his secrets any time soon. This did not distress him. Vincenzo Giuliani was a patient man. One had to be patient to thrive in Rome, where time is measured not in centuries but in millennia, where patience and the long view have always distinguished political life. The city gave its name to the power of patience--Romanità. Romanità excludes emotion, hurry, doubt. Romanità waits, sees the moment and moves ruthlessly when the time is right. Romanità rests on an absolute conviction of ultimate success and arises from a single principle, Cunctando regitur mundis: Waiting, one conquers all.So, even after sixty years, Vincenzo Giuliani felt no sense of impatience with his inability to understand Emilio Sandoz, only a sense of how satisfying it would be when the wait paid off.The Father General's private secretary contacted Father John Candotti on the Feast of the Holy Innocents, three weeks after Emilio's arrival at Number 5. "Sandoz is well enough to see you now," Johannes Voelker informed Candotti. "Be here by two."Be here by two! John thought irritably, marching along toward Vatican City from the retreat house where he'd just been assigned a stuffy little room with a view of Roman walls--the stone only inches from his pointless window. Candotti had dealt with Voelker a couple of times since arriving and had taken a dislike to the Austrian from the start. In fact, John Candotti disliked everything about his present situation.For one thing, he didn't understand why he'd been brought into this business. Neither a lawyer nor an academic, John Candotti was content to have come out on the less prestigious end of the Jesuit dictum, Publish or parish, and he was hip-deep in preparations for the grammar school Christmas program when his superior contacted him and told him to fly to Rome at the end of the week. "The Father General wishes you to assist Emilio Sandoz." That was the extent of his briefing. John had heard of Sandoz, of course. Everyone had heard of Sandoz. But John had no idea how he could be of any use to the man. When he asked for an explanation, he couldn't seem to pry a straight answer out of anyone. He had no practice at this kind of thing; subtlety and indirection were not indoor sports in Chicago.And then there was Rome itself. At the impromptu farewell party, everyone was so excited for him. "Rome, Johnny!" All that history, those beautiful churches, the art. He'd been excited too, dumb shit. What did he know?John Candotti was born to flat land, straight lines, square city blocks; nothing in Chicago had prepared him for the reality of Rome. The worst was when he could actually see the building he wanted to get to but found the street he was on curving away from it, leading him to yet another lovely piazza with yet another beautiful fountain, dumping him into another alley going nowhere. Another hour, trapped and frustrated by the hills, the curves, the rat's nest of streets smelling of cat piss and tomato sauce. He hated being lost, and he was always lost. He hated being late, and he was late all the time. The first five minutes of every conversation was John apologizing for being late and his Roman acquaintances assuring him it was no problem.He hated it all the same, so he walked faster and faster, trying to get to the Jesuit Residence on time for a change, and collected an escort of small children, noisy with derision and obnoxious with delight at this bony, big-nosed, half-bald man with his flapping soutane and pumping arms."I'm sorry to keep you waiting." John Candotti had repeated the apology to each person along the way to Sandoz's room and finally to Sandoz himself as Brother Edward Behr ushered him in and left him alone with the man. "The crowd outside is still huge. Do they ever go away? I'm John Candotti. The Father General asked me to help you at the hearings. Happy to meet you." He held out his hand without thinking, withdrawing it awkwardly when he remembered.Sandoz did not rise from his chair by the window and at first, he either wouldn't or couldn't look in Candotti's direction. John had seen archive images of him, naturally, but Sandoz was a lot smaller than he expected, much thinner; older but not as old as he should have been. What was the calculation? Seventeen years out, almost four years on Rakhat, seventeen years back, but then there were the relativity effects of traveling near light speed. Born a year before the Father General, who was in his late seventies, Sandoz was estimated by the physicists to be about forty-five, give or take a little. Hard years, by the look of him, but not very many of them.The silence went on a long time. Trying not to stare at the man's hands, John debated whether he should just go. It's way too soon, he thought, Voelker must be crazy. Then, finally, he heard Sandoz ask, "English?""American, Father. Brother Edward is English but I'm American.""No," Sandoz said after a while. "La lengua. English."Startled, John realized that he'd misunderstood. "Yes. I speak a little Spanish, if you'd prefer that.""It was Italian, creo. Antes--before, I mean. In the hospital. Sipaj--si yo..." He stopped, close to tears, but got a hold of himself and spoke deliberately. "It would help ... if I could hear ... just one language for a while. English is okay.""Sure. No problem. We'll stick to English," John said, shaken. Nobody had told him Sandoz was this far gone. "I'll make this a short visit, Father. I just wanted to introduce myself and see how you're doing. There's no rush about preparing for the hearings. I'm sure they can be postponed until you're well enough to...""To do what?" Sandoz asked, looking directly at Candotti for the first time. A deeply lined face, Indian ancestry plain in the high-bridged nose, the wide cheekbones, the stoicism. John Candotti could not imagine this man laughing.To defend yourself, John was going to say, but it seemed mean. "To explain what happened."The silence inside the Residence was noticeable, especially by the window, where the endless carnival noise of the city could be heard. A woman was scolding a child in Greek. Tourists and reporters milled around, shouting over the constant roar of the usual Vatican crowds and the taxi traffic. Repairs went on incessantly to keep the Eternal City from falling to pieces, the construction workers yelling, machinery grinding."I have nothing to say." Sandoz turned away again. "I shall withdraw from the Society.""Father Sandoz--Father, you can't expect the Society to let you walk away without understanding what happened out there. You may not want to face a hearing but whatever happens in here is nothing compared to what they'll put you through outside, the moment you walk out the door," John told him. "If we understood, we could help you. Make it easier for you, maybe?" There was no reply, only a slight hardening of the face profiled at the window. "Okay, look. I'll come back in a few days. When you're feeling better, right? Is there anything I can bring you? Someone I could contact for you?""No." There was no force behind the voice. "Thank you."John suppressed a sigh and turned toward the door. His eyes swept past a sketch, lying on top of the small plain bureau. On something like paper, drawn in something like ink. A group of VaRakhati. Faces of great dignity and considerable charm. Extraordinary eyes, frilled with lashes to guard against the brilliant sunlight. Funny how you could tell that these were unusually handsome individuals, even when unfamiliar with their standards of beauty. John Candotti lifted the drawing to look at it more closely. Sandoz stood and took two swift steps toward him.Sandoz was probably half his size and sicker than hell but John Candotti, veteran of Chicago streets, was startled into retreating. Feeling the wall against his back, he covered his embarrassment with a smile and put the drawing back on the bureau. "They're a handsome race, aren't they," he offered, trying to defuse whatever emotion was working on the man in front of him. "The ... folks in the picture--friends of yours, I guess?"Sandoz backed away and looked at John for a few moments, as though calculating the other man's response. The daylight behind his hair lit it up, and the contrast hid his expression. If the room had been brighter or if John Candotti had known him better, he might have recognized a freakish solemnity that preceded any statement Sandoz expected to induce hilarity, or outrage. Sandoz hesitated and then found the precise word he wanted."Colleagues," he said at last. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A visionary work that combines speculative fiction with deep philosophical inquiry,
  • The Sparrow
  • tells the story of a charismatic Jesuit priest and linguist, Emilio Sandoz, who leads a scientific mission entrusted with a profound task: to make first contact with intelligent extraterrestrial life. The mission begins in faith, hope, and beauty, but a series of small misunderstandings brings it to a catastrophic end.
  • Praise for
  • The Sparrow
  • “A startling, engrossing, and moral work of fiction.”
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • “Important novels leave deep cracks in our beliefs, our prejudices, and our blinders.
  • The Sparrow
  • is one of them.”
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • “Powerful . . .
  • The Sparrow
  • tackles a difficult subject with grace and intelligence.”
  • San Francisco Chronicle
  • “Provocative, challenging . . . recalls both Arthur C. Clarke and H. G. Wells, with a dash of Ray Bradbury for good measure.”
  • The Dallas Morning News
  • “[Mary Doria] Russell shows herself to be a skillful storyteller who subtly and expertly builds suspense.”
  • USA Today

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.5K)
★★★★
25%
(1.2K)
★★★
15%
(744)
★★
7%
(347)
23%
(1.1K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Most Overrated Book of the Century?

If you boil it down to its bare bones, the plot is really original and intriguing. However, the writing is atrocious. The author takes 4 - 5 pages to describe something or relay a conversation that could easily have been pared down to a page without losing anything. The long digressions on religion, human nature, etc., would have been fine if they'd been either a.) interesting, b.) informative, or c.) novel, but they didn't meet any of those criteria. They were just inane, boring, and bogged down the plot. The Kindle edition of The Sparrow is about 440 pages long. If it was half that, it might have been an interesting book. Well, interesting if hadn't been for all the characters, none of whom seemed even remotely real. It's like the author has some kind of emotional disorder that doesn't allow her to understand or relate to real human emotions, so she writes her scenes based on what someone's told her people act like. It's hard to explain. It's just that every scene that's supposed to be funny or introspective or angry feels utterly fake and dishonest.

As it is, I'm just skimming through the last 100 pages, skipping almost entire, pointless chapters, just to see how the plot resolves itself.
16 people found this helpful
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Can I give it zero stars?

I am a long time Science Fiction reader who loves" literary" SF most of all and am always fascinated by religious and philosophical questions. Someone I love a great deal suggested I would love this book and from the various descriptions it sounded as if I, indeed, would. I hated it. I don't know when a novel has annoyed me more. I despised the characters and was hoping that they would die a lot more quickly than they did. These subjects have been explored so often and so much better by so many people. This is just a terrible terrible book. Stay away. If you want good thoughtful books about religion in a science fiction setting read Le Guin or read Robert Charles Wilson's Mysterium or heck, read Carl Sagan's Contact for that matter. Or read that wonderful James Blish story which apparently influenced this book. Don't bother with this overwrought nonsense. I am astounded that this won a Tiptree award. I doubt she would have approved.
15 people found this helpful
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Great disappointment

SPOILER ALERT! Spoiler denoted with * at end of post.

A wonderful page-turner with a cheap, maudlin ending. I was expecting a diabolically creative plot-twist to explain the protagonist's deep, dark secret. Instead, I find a common trope* used in the trashiest pulp-SF.

This author--with all her intellectual accolades--should have done better. Some could even interpret her ending as homophobic. I just thought it was stupid.

(*Spoiler: forced sodomy with or by aliens...ugh!)
13 people found this helpful
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A HIGHLY INTELLIGENT TREATISE ON PERSONAL THEOLOGY - A TRUE CLASSIC

Theology can become a distant logical exercise of dry doctrine and easy theoretical conclusions. When it comes down to the wet choices of real life most such theoretical Theology is found wanting as it can offer only limited answers. This is Theology of the other kind, the real one.

Mary Doria Russell has created a highly intelligent story: what would the story of a future saint be? Say, a Jesuit spearheading an exploratory mission to an alien civilization as a linguist of unique abilities; a former outcast that found his true calling as a man of the Cloth and God's face in all the hungry he fed and all the orphans he sheltered and all the lost he bough back from desperation. And then God asked for more. Much more. Is God real or a mere human construct? Can Faith survive anything?

This is one of those books that stays with you for ever. Read THE SPARROW first, CHILDREN OF THE GOD later in order to enjoy them both more.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
6 people found this helpful
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The Best Book I Have Read This Year

At over 500 pages counting the Afterword and appendices, "The Sparrow" is too thick for me to find room for it on my shelves, so I am sending it to a beloved (and celibate) ex-girlfriend who years ago sent me Martin Scorsese's passion project "Silence," about Jesuits in Japan in the seventeenth century. I couldn't think of a person who would more want to read a story about the first Jesuits to go to Alpha Centauri.

The aliens on a planet orbiting the smallest of the three suns that make up the Centauri system are very different from those in "The Three-Body Problem," another very popular novel in which it turns out there is intelligent life there. They are just beginning to see what radio can be used for and one of the first transmissions of their music is picked up by an astronomer at the Arecibio Radio Telescope in Puerto Rico. One of the first people he tells that he has picked up an extraterrestrial signal is the hero of the book, Jesuit priest Emilio Sandoz, who has recently returned home to the island after years of short-term missions to deprived people all over Earth. He immediately recruits the astronomer, his three other closest friends, and three other Jesuits to travel to the planet, named Rakhat by its inhabitants, in a hollowed-out asteroid at an average of 25% of c.

Mary Doria Russell's only mistake with this book was setting it within her own lifetime (it starts in the mid-2010s). It will probably be the 2110s before we have Australians on Mars and miners throughout the asteroid belt (assuming we can avoid a Third World War or comprehensive environmental collapse). The book ends in 2060, when as one character observes the population of Earth is nearly 16 billion (which isn't going to happen by then, or probably ever). Even in the 2010s the technological singularity is approaching; you pretty much need to have a Ph.D. to have a job. Most other jobs are being handed over to AIs taught by the last humans to do those jobs and set up by indentured servants like Sofia Mendes, the second-most compelling character in the book.

I caught myself doing something that these days, I only do for the best novels: casting the movie version in my head. The thing is, like "Dune," this book is too sprawling to be told with a single two- or even three-hour movie. It is divided into 3 acts, each of which should be its own movie. The first act is Sandoz's life and friendships on Earth and on the (from their perspective brief) journey inside the asteroid to Rakhat. The second act is Rakhat itself. These two acts are told in flashback through the memory of Sandoz, who in the third act is the only human who makes it back alive (though horribly maimed) to Earth. The first movie could be named "Scientists," the second could be "Missionaries" and the third could only be "Priests" since literally everyone Sandoz interacts with after returning to Earth is a Jesuit.

Maybe I would change a few things for the third movie (such as giving the humans more than one rifle, which might have changed the course of events), but nothing for the first two. I really shouldn't have wanted a happy ending for this book. It is too powerful. Six stars.
5 people found this helpful
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An excellent novel on first contact with an alien species!

If you enjoyed The Mote in God's Eye by Larry Niven, you will love this novel. Both are excellent first contact novels.
Warning! This is a very dark novel. If you like all sunshine and light, Walt Disney happy ending novels - this is not your type of book.

The basic story line: Astronomers on earth have picked up signals from around Alpha Centauri, which turn out to be the most beautiful music humanity has ever heard. An expedition is sent out to make first contact with what must be intellegent life.

This book is the surviors story, told in flashbacks. The story centers around a Jesuit priest, Father Emilio Sandoz, an expert linquist, who has lost his faith in God after being the only known survivor of an expedition that has gone horribly wrong. The expedition party members went out with the best of intentions, but because of misunderstanding of the vast cultural differences between them and their alien hosts, and disturbed by what they percieve as the explotation of one part of this alien society by another, they decide to assist the small group of aliens that they are living among for several months with improved food yields. This starts a chain of events with results that prove disasterous for themselves and the entire planet.

This books operates on several levels and grapples with the issue of how does a person hold on to his faith in God and that everything in life that is experienced serves a higher purpose, when he is plunged into what seems to be an infinite amount of pain?
5 people found this helpful
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be warned

I heard so many good things about this book but was not prepared for the shocking ending. I was left disturbed for days after finishing the book. I also found the timeline to be a bit confusing and slow in the middle. I guess the unconventional ending is why this book was rated as one of the best SciFi books but for me, it was too much.
4 people found this helpful
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A mission doomed by the weight of it's own ridiculousness.

The Sparrow is so fraught with illogical ridiculousness that any attempt at real science-fiction quickly gets lost in the mularky. Consequently, the entire story turns to mush and is nothing more than moderately entertaining escapism. To illustrate:

- The core group leading an expedition to the first-ever Earth-like planet suspected of containing life are chosen merely by virtue of the fact that they happened to be standing around a deep space listening apparatus at the same time - not because they are the most qualified. A strategic error that will result in a decision that dramatically alters the outcome of the mission.
- The commander of their spaceship was chosen for his skills at flying helicopters.
- The story jumps from "Hey y'all, what do you say we all head out to another planet" to "Hey y'all, we're approaching the planet" in just a handful of pages.
- The team has to determine which of two planets is the right one to land on - to choose incorrectly might mean the death of them all. The decision process is akin to someone pointing at one planet and all the others nodding in agreement. Problem solved.
- The planet and society they encounter on the new planet is remarkably similar to what is found on Earth. There is edible flora and fauna, bug and lizard like creatures, merchants in cites talking of profits, losses and warehousing, boats used to transport inhabitants up and down stream, and much more. Imagine hoofing a gazillion miles through space only to find you landed in Toledo. Welcome to your new planet.
- The one person that holds the answer to everything that happened on the planet ain't talking. His tight lipped-ness requires you to wade through hundreds of pages of brooding and self-absorption before you find out anything of substance about the ill-fated mission.
- Early on we learn that only one person returns from the mission, but with 50 pages left there are still a half-dozen explorers doing the happy dance on Planet X. How can all this outstanding business be wrapped up in 50 pages, you ask yourself? I was concerned that I was being hoodwinked into having to read book 2 to learn the fate of the mission. Not so. Amazingly, in the last 50 pages our hero has returned to Earth, his comrades have been dealt with, and we discover why he has been in such a foul mood all this time.

There is lots more ridiculousness that could be heaped on this pile, but it's only more of the same ill-thought out plot holes that will test your ability to suspend belief. Unfortunately the silliness is so prevalent that it detracts from the novel's burning question which is summed up in the following quote from the book,

“That is my dilemma. Because if I was led by God to love God, step by step, as it seemed, if I accept that the beauty and the rapture were real and true, the rest of it was God’s will too, and that, gentlemen, is cause for bitterness. But if I am simply a deluded ape who took a lot of old folktales far too seriously, then I brought all this on myself and my companions and the whole business becomes farcical, doesn’t it. The problem with atheism, I find, under these circumstances...is that I have no one to despise but myself. If, however, I choose to believe that God is vicious, then at least I have the solace of hating God."

Unfortunately I am given no reason to recommend this book to you or am left with no motivation to read the follow-up. Considering that, I encourage you to continue your search for interesting, believable and thought provoking science fiction.
4 people found this helpful
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A tragic tale full of wonder, mystery, and the search for meaning.

Father Sandoz is the Job of the future, except he failed his test. From page one, we know him to be the sole survivor of a first contact mission to the planet Rakhat, four light-years away. His friends are all dead, his alien hosts were slaughtered, he is ill and maimed, and his spirit is broken. What had begun as a beautiful leap of faith ended in unimaginable misery, and he is judged culpable. This story, told from the beginning and the end simultaneously, slowly reveals how the Jesuit mission to Rakhat failed, but the meaning - or as the author would say, the poetry - lies in the why.

The Sparrow is unlike anything I’ve ever read before. It is a well-written and potent mix of science fiction and theology, highlighted by masterful world-building and peppered with shrewd banter. The characterization is thorough and compelling; the twists are unpredictable yet felicitous. It is truly incredible writing, and I may certainly read more by this author. However, I am conflicted about the choice of structure: starting us at the end. How could I allow myself to become attached to characters I knew would not survive? And yet, if I had to watch them all die one by one, without warning, I would have been appalled by the tragedy. As it is, I failed to connect with the characters and still found it to be a sad story. Amazing and stirring, but sad.

As a parable, though, it is superb. It provides a powerful example of warped faith overstrained. Faith based on the law of sowing and reaping expects temporal rewards, is audacious enough to presume the mind of God, and is destined for disappointment. “... God will reach toward us if we reach toward Him ...” This is the root of the myopic “problem of evil” which has plagued religious faiths for millenia.

The various responses to the “problem of evil” are named theodicy (vindication of providence). There are several such arguments in Christianity. In Hinduism and Buddhism, the answer is Karma, either from this life or another. Judaism has a soul-making theodicy: suffering is natural and provides growth opportunities for the sufferer as well as virtue exercises for their neighbors. However, my favorite theodicy is that of Alan Watts.

”When we examine our bloodstreams under a microscope we see there’s one hell of a fight going on. All sorts of microorganisms are chewing each other up. And if we got overly fascinated with our view of our own bloodstreams in the microscope we should start taking sides, which would be fatal. Because the health of our organism depends on the continuance of this battle. What is, in other words, conflict at one level of magnification is harmony at a higher level. Now could it possibly be, therefore, that we—with all our problems, conflicts, neuroses, sicknesses, political outrages, wars, tortures and everything that goes on in human life—are a state of conflict which can be seen in a larger perspective as a situation of harmony?”
- Alan Watts, The Myopic View of the World
3 people found this helpful
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Sci-fi chick lit with a theological aspect

This was an entertaining and occasionally thought-provoking read, but it has some distinctive characteristics that make it less than fully successful as literature.

There is not a "normal" male character in the entire ensemble. We have the smoldering latin, the gay Texan Marine (!), the nerdy computer guy, etc, etc. I appreciate the need for distinctive characters, but the "island of misfit toys" motif was taken too far for belief.

The "Anne" character got a bit too much narrative time. I realize that it was probably the author's biographical character (or projection), but she was a bit too absorbed in her flirty shtick and admiring her aging but attractive body in the mirror to be attractive to male readers.

The references to a President from Texas who was obviously loathed by the narrator, along with favorable references to universal health care, place the author pretty clearly in a certain political camp. These references did not add to the narrative and detracted from the author's credibility.

All that being noted, the book was enjoyable in many respects, not the least of which was that it did not take an openly hostile view toward the Catholic Church or the Jesuits, both of which figure prominently in the book.

This book will be especially enjoyed by female readers of a theological inclination who enjoy science fiction, but I recommend that the rest of you give it a try, at least.
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