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The Sky People
View on WikipediaThis article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. (December 2011) |
The Sky People is an alternate history science fiction novel by American writer S. M. Stirling.[1][2] It was first published by Tor Books in hardcover in November 2006, with a book club edition co-published with the Science Fiction Book Club following in December of the same year. Tor issued paperback, ebook, and trade paperback editions in October 2007, April 2010, and May 2010 respectively. Audiobook editions were published by Tantor Media in January 2007.[3]
Key Information
The book takes place on Venus in an alternate Solar System in which probes from the United States and the Soviet Union find intelligent life and civilizations on both Venus and Mars. The book is heavily influenced by the works of writers such as Ray Bradbury, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Arthur C. Clarke, and Larry Niven. The sequel, In the Courts of the Crimson Kings, is set on Mars.
Plot summary
[edit]In an alternate universe, life exists on Venus and Mars. Because of the discovery, the United States and the Soviet Union have poured all of their resources into space exploration and sent their best and brightest to colonize Venus and Mars. Although there have been a few outbreaks of hostilities on Earth, an uneasy détente exists in space between the Americans and the Soviets, who are struggling for supremacy and supported by their respective allies. The European Union is also anxious not to be excluded from the neocolonial race but is far behind the other powers.
In 1962, the Soviets drop planetary probes on Venus and discover people, both humans and Neanderthals, on the planet. Crewed flights by the Soviets and later by the Americans establish bases on the planet (the American one is named Jamestown, the Soviet one Cosmograd) and find other familiar species, including dinosaurs. Both fauna and flora are strangely similar to those from Earth's past.
In 1988, Lieutenant Marc Vitrac, a Ranger in the US Aerospace Force, has been on the planet for a year. Born in a Cajun family amidst the Louisiana bayous, his primary function is exploration of the vast wild lands, but at the beginning of the novel, he is tapped to welcome newcomers to the colony.
The new arrivals are somewhat taken back by the ceratopsia used as a shuttle bus. The dinosaur has been "iced" by the insertion of an Internal Control Device into its brain, which allows the creature to be controlled with messages sent directly to the brain.
The new arrivals include Cynthia Whitlock, a young African-American specialist, and Wing Commander Christopher Blair, a supposedly-British linguist. As with all the Terrans on the planet, Cynthia and Blair also have other skills. Blair spends most of his time in the nearby town of Kartahown and extends their knowledge of one of the native languages.
As the story progresses, many of the characters comment about how similarly evolution has progressed on Venus and on Earth. Naturally, the scientists at the Jamestown base are puzzled by the seeming parallelisms of evolution. Although the base has no means to check DNA (as in the alternate timeline, most research funding has been spent on space travel), other tests indicate that the natives are closely related to Terrans. The fossil record is very spotty, with occasional infusions of new species, but no one has an explanation as to why there are humans and other Earth animals and plants on Venus.
On another part of Venus, an unknown external force interferes with the computer on a Soviet shuttle and causes it to crash-land into the unexplored wild lands. The Soviets ask for American assistance to recover the crew. The airship Vepaja, with Captain Tyler commanding, is selected for the rescue attempt, and Marc, Cynthia, and Chris are chosen as the crew. Jadviga Binkis, the wife of the Soviet shuttle commander, is also included in the crew. Marc also takes his Epicyon pup, Tahyo, with them.
The weather, animals, mechanical failure, and sabotage from an unknown enemy eventually force the group to abandon the airship. Once it arrives at its destination, it finds itself in the midst of a civil war between the very-human Cloud Mountain People and the Neanderthals. Additionally, an alien AI is annoyed at the Terrans for interfering with the Venusians. The AI is sapient but not sentient and can control both Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis within a short range. Unsure what to do, the AI calls for its creator race to return. Additionally, Blair discovers that the Cloud People speak a Proto-Indo-European language, which indicates that the creator race has taken Homo sapiens from earth and seeded them on Venus within the last several thousand years. The group sides with the Cloud Mountain People, since Marc has fallen in love with their princess, and helps them defeat the Neanderthals. The Cloud Mountain People's lands are destroyed, however, by a biological weapon on board the downed Soviet shuttle. Marc thus leads the Cloud Mountain People on a five thousand mile overland journey back to Jamestown to settle around the base and brings with him an alien artifact, which may be evidence of the alien race that brought life to Venus and Mars.
Reception
[edit]In a praiseworthy review, Publishers Weekly highly commended the author for utilizing old-fashioned literary tropes, like the native princess who has magical powers, all while avoiding genre pitfalls and stereotyping the multicultural atmosphere of the novel. They also called the scientific elements "refreshingly realistic" and predicted that "readers will eagerly anticipate a trip to Mars in the sequel."[4]
Moreover, Kirkus gushed over the author by stating that the novel "offers an easygoing, atmospheric tale airbrushed with fuzzy political overtones, along with a good bit of humor and lively characterization."[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Uchronia: The Lords of Creation Series". www.uchronia.net.
- ^ "Fantastic Fiction.com: The Sky People by S. M. Stirling". www.fantasticfiction.com.
- ^ The Sky People title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- ^ "The Sky People by S. M. Stirling". www.publishersweekly.com.
- ^ THE SKY PEOPLE | Kirkus Reviews.
The Sky People
View on GrokipediaBackground and Context
Alternate History Premise
In the alternate history of The Sky People, the primary point of divergence from baseline human history occurs during the early Space Race of the 1960s, when unmanned probes dispatched by the United States and Soviet Union detect unexpected habitability on Venus and Mars. Rather than revealing a scorching, acidic hellscape as in reality, these missions return data indicating a temperate world with a breathable nitrogen-oxygen atmosphere, liquid water oceans, and biosignatures suggestive of complex life, including photosynthetic vegetation and animal activity.[5] [6] This prompts an explosive escalation in rocketry and propulsion technologies, with both superpowers prioritizing manned expeditions over lunar efforts, achieving orbital insertions around Venus by the mid-1970s and surface landings shortly thereafter.[7] The discovery reshapes global geopolitics and science, fostering a tense but collaborative race to claim extraterrestrial resources and knowledge amid the ongoing Cold War. By 1988, the setting of the novel, small American and Soviet outposts—such as the U.S.-led Jamestown Base—dot Venus's equatorial regions, supporting teams of scientists, engineers, and military personnel who contend with indigenous ecosystems blending Cretaceous-era dinosaurs, Pleistocene megafauna like saber-toothed cats, and archaic human variants akin to Neanderthals organized in tribal societies.[1] [7] These findings validate pre-20th-century speculative astronomy by figures like Percival Lowell, who imagined canal-building civilizations, but manifest as primitive, conflict-prone cultures wielding bronze-age tools and engaging in ritual warfare.[6] At a deeper level, the premise incorporates a prehistoric extraterrestrial engineering project by the enigmatic "Lords of Creation," advanced beings who, diverging from Earth's Triassic period onward, extracted and transplanted biota across the solar system to terraform Venus into a cradle for experimental life forms.[6] [8] This ancient intervention—unrevealed to 20th-century explorers until later evidence emerges—explains the planet's ecological patchwork, where flora and fauna from disparate epochs coexist without evolutionary continuity, challenging terrestrial paleontology and implying directed panspermia on a cosmic scale. Human colonization thus unfolds against a backdrop of hidden cosmic history, with Earth governments treating Venus as a frontier for expansion rather than a barren rock, driving narratives of discovery, adaptation, and rivalry.[9]Author S.M. Stirling and Creative Influences
S.M. Stirling, born in France in 1953 to Canadian parents and naturalized as a U.S. citizen, is a science fiction and fantasy author renowned for alternate history novels that blend military strategy, cultural evolution, and speculative what-ifs. Residing in New Mexico, he has produced over 50 books since the 1980s, including the controversial Domination of the Draka series, which explores a timeline where a Boer-descended society conquers much of Earth. Stirling's work often features detailed world-building grounded in historical plausibility, drawing on his interest in pre-industrial technologies and societal resilience, as seen in later series like the Emberverse post-apocalyptic saga.[10][11] The Sky People, published by Tor Books on November 14, 2006, marks Stirling's venture into planetary romance within an alternate history framework, positing a 20th-century Space Race that uncovers habitable Venus and Mars teeming with Earth-like life forms, including dinosaurs and prehistoric mammals, due to ancient extraterrestrial seeding. Set primarily in 1988 at the U.S.-led Jamestown base near the Venusian city of Kartahown, the novel follows Cajun explorer Marc Vitrac amid geopolitical rivalries between American-Commonwealth forces and Soviet "EastBloc" operatives, tribal skirmishes, and ecological perils. This setup reconstructs pulp-era solar system tropes for a modern audience, emphasizing isolation—only about 132 Earth humans on Venus—and heroic individualism justified by high transportation costs.[3][12] Stirling has described the book as a deliberate homage to science fiction's formative history, particularly the planetary adventure subgenre of the early-to-mid-20th century. Key influences include Edgar Rice Burroughs, whose John Carter of Mars and Pellucidar inspired the lush, fecund Venusian jungles overrun by saber-tooths, megafauna, and "sub-men" tribes, evoking themes of civilization clashing with primal savagery. Leigh Brackett's Venusian settings, blending archaic societies with frontier outposts like the hybrid Kartahown, inform the cultural mosaics and rogue-hero archetypes akin to Northwest Smith. Additional shapers from Stirling's formative reading encompass Robert A. Heinlein for technological grit and Ray Bradbury for atmospheric wonder, though Burroughs remains the foundational touchstone, with Stirling crediting him as an early influence that fueled the novel's pulp revival amid a resurgent interest in Burroughsian adventure fiction within its own alternate timeline.[3][11][12][13]World-Building and Setting
Venusian Environment and Ecology
In the alternate history of The Sky People, Venus possesses a dense, oxygen-rich atmosphere with surface pressure near one Earth atmosphere, enabling human explorers to operate without full pressure suits, though high humidity and heat necessitate acclimation. Average surface temperatures hover around 30–40°C, approximately 10°C warmer than Earth's global mean, fostering a perpetually tropical climate with frequent heavy rainfall and minimal seasonal variation due to the planet's slow rotation and axial tilt. The surface is dominated by vast equatorial jungles, interspersed with swamps, rivers, and volcanic highlands, where thick cloud cover diffuses sunlight into a perpetual hazy twilight.[14][15] The Venusian biosphere exhibits an uncanny parallelism to Earth's, featuring carbon-based life with DNA-like genetics, left-handed amino acids, and photosynthetic pigments akin to chlorophyll, which has confounded biologists studying samples from early probes and landings launched in the 1960s. Flora primarily comprises gymnosperm-like trees, ferns, and cycad analogs forming multilayered canopies that support epiphytes and vines, creating a fecund understory rich in decomposers and nitrogen-fixing symbionts. This vegetation base sustains a food web of herbivorous megafauna, including sauropod-like reptiles and ornithopod dinosaurs, preyed upon by theropod carnivores and aerial pterosaur equivalents.[7][16] Faunal diversity includes not only reptilian dinosaurs and oversized arthropods—such as dragonfly-like insects with wingspans exceeding 1 meter—but also primitive mammalian forms and humanoid "beastmen" tribes exhibiting bipedal locomotion, tool use, and social structures reminiscent of Paleolithic hominids. These humanoids, often depicted as Neanderthal-like with furred bodies and tribal hierarchies, inhabit clearings and river valleys, engaging in hunter-gatherer economies supplemented by rudimentary agriculture. Ecological dynamics emphasize high biomass productivity, with rapid growth rates compensating for predation pressures, though invasive Earth microbes pose risks to native species due to biochemical compatibility. The similarity of Venusian life to terrestrial forms fuels in-story hypotheses of ancient seeding or convergent evolution under parallel geophysical conditions, including a molten core generating a protective magnetic field.[1][17][12]| Aspect | Venusian Characteristics | Comparison to Earth |
|---|---|---|
| Atmosphere | 20–25% O₂, N₂ dominant, high H₂O vapor | Breathable but hotter, more humid than modern Earth |
| Temperature Range | 25–50°C equatorial averages | +10°C over Earth baseline; no polar ice caps |
| Dominant Flora | Ferns, cycads, conifer analogs | Mesozoic-like, high productivity |
| Megafauna | Dinosaurs (sauropods, theropods), giant insects | Analogous to Cretaceous ecosystems |
| Intelligent Life | Tribal humanoids (beastmen) | Primitive tool-users, similar to early Homo spp. |

