Form: Novel
Year: 1980
Publication history:
- ???? : Lord Valentine's Castle (hc) , Easton Press
- ???? : El Castillo de Lord Valentine (hc) , Acervo (Spain) (in Spanish)
- ???? : Le Château de Lord Valentin (pb) , J'ai lu (France), 2656 (in French )
- 1980 : Le Château de Lord Valentin (hc) , Laffont (France), 491 pp., ISBN 2221005643 (in French )
- 1980 : Lord Valentine's Castle (hc) , Gollancz (UK), 444 pp., 02792-4
- 1980 : Lord Valentine's Castle (hc) , Harper & Row, 444 pp., 014026-7
- 1980 : Lord Valentine's Castle (hc) , Science Fiction Book Club, 466 pp., 3887
- 1981 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Pan, 506 pp., 26462-1
- 1981 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Bantam, 447 pp., ISBN 0-553-14428-6
- 1983 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Bantam, 447 pp.
- 1983 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Bantam, 447 pp., 23063-8
- 1984 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Bantam, 447 pp.
- 1988 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Pan, 506 pp.
- 1989 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Bantam, 447 pp., 22928-1
- 1992 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Pan, 506 pp.
- 1994 : Lord Valentine (pb) , Lübbe (Germany), 636 pp., ISBN 3404241932 (in German )
- 1995 : El Castillo de Lord Valentine (pb) , Ultramar (Spain), ISBN 8473864867 (in Spanish)
- 1995 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Pan, 506 pp.
- 1995 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Harper & Row, 528 pp., ISBN 0061054879
- 1996 : De Burcht van Heer Valentijn (tpb) , Luitingh-Sijthoff (Netherlands), 690 pp., ISBN 90-245-2412-1 (in Dutch )
- 1999 : Lord Valentine's Castle (pb) , Voyager (UK), 506 pp., ISBN 0006483771
- 1999 : Valentine of Majipoor (hc) , Science Fiction Book Club, 806 pp., 02048
- 2002 : Le Château de Lord Valentin (pb) , Livre de Poche (France), 672 pp., ISBN 2253072389 (in French )
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Comments:
This is really the one that started it all for me. Not that it was the first Silverberg I read (far from it), but it was what started my devotion to (some would say obsession with) his work. I wouldn't say it's his best novel (don't ask me to choose, please), but it is his greatest feat of world-building, and entirely characteristic of the tone of his later, more mature, writing. In some ways, earlier books like Dying Inside and stories like "Born with the Dead" are superior (call it personal intensity), but Lord Valentine's Castle brings all of his themes together in a good-natured mess free of the darkness that characterized his writing in the sixties and seventies.
It's one of those SF stories where the setting is really the star attraction. The planet of Majipoor is a Big Planet, long ago colonized by humans and a variety of other species.There are myriads of interesting plants, animals, and cultures, and the mysterious Majipoori natives, the Shapeshifters. In all the best ways, it reminds me of Jack Vance's writing: a boggle of invention, all described colorfully, with characters romping from one quirky society to the next.
After initially claiming he would not write a sequel, Silverberg has revisited Majipoor numerous times, not just directly continuing the saga of Valentine, but filling out the planet's history both before and after his time. The "Valentine Trilogy" consists of this book, Majipoor Chronicles, and Valentine Pontifex. "The Seventh Shrine" is a shorter work featuring Valentine but not related to the main story of the trilogy. Mountains of Majipoor takes place well after Valentine's day. The "Prestimion Trilogy", set long before Valentine, comprises Sorcerers of Majipoor, Lord Prestimion, and The King of Dreams. After this, Silverberg claims there will be no more Majipoor books, and he just might keep his word this time.
Online reviews:
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