the elaborate structure of the Technic History series with its alternative reading orders (although I have done this to death);
the vast sweep of history from the Solar System in the mid-twenty-first century to the edge of another spiral arm of the galaxy several millennia hence;
the major sub-series;
the layered narratives of that ultimate future historical collection, The Earth Book of Stormgate;
the wealth of detail in any particular instalment, most recently Ruadrath biology on Talwin in A Circus of Hells.
At present, we, editorially speaking, are rereading A Circus of Hells while always remembering its place in:
the Young Flandry Trilogy;
the Dominic Flandry series;
the Technic History as a whole.
It's an awe-inspiring achievement -- and especially so as it grew organically.
ReplyDeleteKaor, Mr. Stirling!
ReplyDeleteI agree, because it was so ACCIDENTAL, stemming from Anderson impulsively mentioning "Polesotechnarch van Rijn" in THE PLAGUE OF MASTERS.
Ad astra! Sean