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Banner of Souls (2004)

by Liz Williams

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Banner of Souls (1)

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2325117,063 (3.61)18
In the distant future, Earth is dominated by a Martian matriarchy known as the Grandmothers. Males are virtually unknown, and reproduction is a matter of industry. These experts in genetic engineering have bred a messiah, Lunae, who can bend time to her will. But when killers from a rival planet are dispatched to destroy her, the Grandmothers order a Martian warrior, Dreams-of-War, to protect the young savior. Dreams-of-War's guardianship leads to powerful revelations--not only the mystery behind Lunae's true purpose and the reason she's being stalked by assassins, but also the long-forgotten secrets of humanity's first contact with aliens. An atmospheric blend of fantasy and science fiction, Banner of Souls was shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke Award. Publishers Weekly declared Liz Williams "an author to watch," and Booklist observed that "the world Williams has created is endowed with great depth and a satisfyingly inventive history."… (more)
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» See also 18 mentions

Showing 5 of 5
Liz Williams is a new author to me, and apparently she also writes great detective stories with an entirely different 'mood' to them - Banner of Souls takes place in a far far far future - in the Reynolds, Banksian style where people have re-engineered and remodeled themselves for so long they don't know what humans were originally like nor that humankind did not settle Earth from Mars but the other way around..... (Somewhere along the way men have been sidelined, but this is never explained; it's just the way it is, and it also appears that the remaining 'women' have pretty much moved away from physical contact period, with anyone. There are in fact some 'male' beings that are fundamental to the story too.) The problem, and it's a big one, is that the future has become horribly entangled with the past/present and is threatening to destroy what is left of the present with their 'haunt' technology. Souls and physical being can be separated, the soul left alive in another dimension, which, in the future has been accessed and used for space travel and other much worse things. Naturally there is ONE PERSON who can fix everything, and she must be protected and aided at all costs...... The dangers and monsters are imaginative - huge machines that were meant to manipulate earth's weather, still roaming the seas, 'dragons' and nanobots EVERYWHERE and in EVERYTHING in a creepy way..... It moves quickly, the setting is fascinating, the characters grew on me, and I began to care - all good. I'll read more Williams as I stumble across it. **** ( )
1 vote sibylline | Jan 9, 2013 |
Atmospheric adventure story about saving humanity in the far future. Ending a little disappointing. Full review here. ( )
  mrawdon | Oct 8, 2009 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/377382.html

Basically very good. Teetered on the edge of being too complex for late-night reading (I seem to have spent most of the last week feeling very sleepy) but I managed. Far future setting, almost all characters are women (hardly any men left alive), vibrant Mars vs failing Earth, nanotechnology, advanced military tech and also raising the dead. Will buy more by her. ( )
1 vote nwhyte | Sep 9, 2007 |
novel world ( )
  dgrayson | Jan 1, 2007 |
This is a fascinating, complicated book with an interesting story and some excellent world building. The way Williams tosses the reader into the world she has created and then slowly reveals its complexities as the tale progresses is beautifully done.

However, for me there was something lacking. I'm not exactly sure what it was, but I think I'll have to go with 'soul' or 'emotion'. That's what got it a relatively low rating from me.

All the same, I recommend it to others for the spectacular world building and realise that they may find it not to be lacking in anything at all. ( )
  rocalisa | Nov 17, 2006 |
Showing 5 of 5
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Liz Williamsprimary authorall editionscalculated
Bridges, GregCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Nielsen, CliffCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Dreams-of-War was hunting the remnants of men on the slopes of the Martian Olympus when she came across the herd of ghosts.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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In the distant future, Earth is dominated by a Martian matriarchy known as the Grandmothers. Males are virtually unknown, and reproduction is a matter of industry. These experts in genetic engineering have bred a messiah, Lunae, who can bend time to her will. But when killers from a rival planet are dispatched to destroy her, the Grandmothers order a Martian warrior, Dreams-of-War, to protect the young savior. Dreams-of-War's guardianship leads to powerful revelations--not only the mystery behind Lunae's true purpose and the reason she's being stalked by assassins, but also the long-forgotten secrets of humanity's first contact with aliens. An atmospheric blend of fantasy and science fiction, Banner of Souls was shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke Award. Publishers Weekly declared Liz Williams "an author to watch," and Booklist observed that "the world Williams has created is endowed with great depth and a satisfyingly inventive history."

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One of Mars's most elite warriors, Dreams-of-War, must travel to Earth, where she has been assigned to guard a very special child. But someone else is speeding toward the same planet with a different agenda. She is Yskatarina Iye, daughter of an ancient clan from a ghost-realm at the edge of the solar system. The result of an experiment gone wrong, she has been reborn with a terrible destiny: To seek out one little girl from the teeming hordes of the galaxy and kill her.



The girl's name is Lunae. Grown from a secret genetic code, she alone can breach time's barrier and alter the shape of thing to come. She knows that she has a fierce protector in Dreams-of-War, yet is powerless against the fate that hurls her back into the chasm of history. And soon savior will be pitted against killer in a race to prevent the last vestiges of humanity from being extinguished forever.



-- text from the back cover
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