![]() ![]() There's bound to be extra publicity because Orson Scott Card, who provides an intro, helped discover the book, but while Card fans will enjoy the large-scale world building and historical detail, they may be disappointed by the lack of real characters or sustained plot. While Eschbach's vignettes do form a fragile whole, the structure lacks urgency or focus. It tells the tale of a galactic empire with an immortal emperor who has planets that. Why? Eventually, the reader finds out the answer, though the revelation comes almost as an afterthought. The Carpet Makers by Andreas Eschbach is a German science fiction novel. The new interstellar government learns the emperor secretly maintained thousands of carpet-making planets. And so life goes, generation after generation, even after rumors and, finally, ships from the new government arrive with word of the emperor's removal. ![]() ![]() Intended for the emperor on a distant planet, the carpets are so finely made that each carpet maker can only finish one in his lifetime, working with hairs from the bodies of his wives, who are chosen for the quality and color of their tresses. Set on a low-tech world where the main industry is the manufacture of carpets of human hair, German SF author Eschbach's first novel forms a grim mosaic of stories of myriad people and cultures trapped in stagnation by one powerful man's petty anger. ![]()
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