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The Worthing Saga
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The Worthing Saga
Author: Orson Scott Card

Book Information
Publisher: Tor Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780812533316 - ISBN-10: 0812533313
Publication Date: 12/15/1992
Pages: 480


Other Versions of this Book: Paperback

Book Description:
It was a miracle of science that permitted human beings to live, if not forever, then for a long, long time. Some people, anyway. The rich, the powerful--they lived their lives at the rate of one year every ten. Somec created two societies: that of people who lived out their normal span and died, and those who slept away the decades, skipping over the intervening years and events. It allowed great plans to be put in motion. It allowed interstellar Empires to be built.

It came near to destroying humanity.

After a long, long time of decadence and stagnation, a few seed ships were sent out to save our species. They carried human embryos and supplies, and teaching robots, and one man. The Worthing Saga is the story of one of these men, Jason WOrthing, and the world he found for the seed he carried.

Orson Scott Card is "a master of the art of storytelling" (Booklist), and The Worthing Saga is a story that only he could have written.

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Top Member Book Reviews

Mitchell N. (MilesGrey) wrote on 7/28/2009...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

The Worthing Saga is the best kind of Orson Scott Card fiction, the kind he rewrote from his first days until he got it really right. The germ of the Worthing Saga was Card's first scifi-fantasy story, Tinker, but as it evolved into his short story collection "Capitol", building on the ideas of Asimov's Foundation series, the stories gained three key ideas. First, the drug Somec allows individuals to sleep un-aging through vast timeperiods making possbile great achievements like interstellar spaceflight, planetwide city building, and dissolution of the social fabric of vast empires. Thus Card explains the social-empirial breakdown which Asimov attributed to general stagnation. Beyond the Empire, Somec becomes a plot device for the main character who developed out of his second theme, telepathic (and later telekinetic) powers. Jason Worthing is born a telepathic 'swipe' long after his dead father convinced the Empire that swipes should not exist. Abner Doon, however, the Hari Seldon of Card's world, wants to create a fresh society with telepathy in the mix, so he sends Jason to found a remote colony. The rest of the Worthing Saga tells how Jason and his gift influence that world. Eventually, in a very spiderman-esque twist, Worthings descendants use their gift to take greater power and responsibility than even he could have dreamed, but do they wield it with true compassion? In this theme Card's Mormon ideas emerge to create a tender and interesting, but flawed view of Incarnation, how God ought to dwell with man. An excellent work rivalling Card's masterpieces Ender's Game and Speaker for the Dead and securing his place among the great scifi authors of the past century.

Anton T. (DrT) wrote on 8/21/2005...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

Excellent example of Orson Scott Card's story telling abilities. This one deals with the blessings...and curses...of immortality.


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Cassie H. (Irishcoda) wrote on 8/4/2006...


Husband loves this author & this type of book, action sci-fi

Allen B. wrote on 5/29/2006...


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