Wizard - John Varley - 1980 BCE Berkeley Putnam Hardback

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Condition: Acceptable. Please see the images for more details. May show signs of wear such as:
• Shelf wear or scuffing on the cover
• Creases, marks, or tears on pages or dust jacket
• Possible remainder marks or previous owner’s name/notes inside

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Blurb: “God was the world, the world was a wheel, and the wheel was Gaea.

Welcome to Gaea, the alien that is itself a world as varied, as magnificent, as surprising as our own. Hundreds of thousands of readers have pronounced John Varley's last novel, Titan, one of the most remarkable books of the 1970s. Fellow professionals have hastened into print with praise: Isaac Asimov has compared John Varley to the young Robert A. Heinlein;

Roger Zelazny calls him a "mind-grabber"; Michael Bishop simply says, "Wow!"; Richard

Lupoff calls him "without question the most important new talent to emerge in years"; Poul Anderson tips in with "Awesome"; and George

R. R. Martin calls him "the wildest and most original science fictional mind of the decade." Now with the publication of Wizard, John Varley's monumental sequel to Titan, readers are bound to react as strongly as before to the continuing story of Cirocco Jones, Gaby, and the alien that is a world.

Former Captain Cirocco "Rocky" Jones is the Wizard. Seventy-five years after the events of Titan, Rocky has an odd, almost symbiotic relationship with the planet-sized alien she calls home. But Gaea is three-million-years old, a supreme ruler, a god, whose body is failing and whose mind is swiftly deteriorating. Signs, portents and warnings from every quarter of 

the living world hint at one devastating conclu-sion: Gaea has gone insane. Rocky is not in much better shape herself.

The once-proud commander is little more than a drunken bum, trying to wash away with gin the knowledge that she needs Gaea, and Gaea needs her, and that someday they must struggle. In Wizard, John Varley has written a novel every bit as compelling as Titan. Wizard is more than an adventure novel, however; it is a thoughtful and humane examination of free will taken to its most profound and frightening

extremes. Wizard is speculative fiction of the first rank and a novel of extraordinary power.“