The Steerswoman books are a series of four speculative fiction novels by Rosemary Kirstein.

Publication history

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The series consists of four books: The Steerswoman (1989), The Outskirter's Secret (1992), The Lost Steersman (2003), and The Language of Power (2004).[1] The full series is planned to be seven books.[2] The first two books were also published in the omnibus The Steerswoman's Road in 2003.[3] The books were originally published by Del Rey Books, but Kirstein has re-acquired the copyright to self-publish them.[2]

Setting

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A Steerswoman is a traveling scholar, required to answer any question asked of them, as long as the asker answers truthfully in return. Anyone refusing to answer a Steerswoman's question is placed under a ban, and no Steerswoman will answer their questions in future. Only wizards do not respect the Steerswomen, maintaining intense secrecy around their magic.

Kirstein's work is often characterized as science fantasy. Jo Walton describes the Steerswoman series as "not only science fiction, but more science fictional than anything else."[1] Cory Doctorow says of The Steerswoman, "even the book's genre is a riddle that you'll have enormous great fun solving."[2] The Steerswoman series addresses themes of technological development, inter-species interaction, and distribution of knowledge.[4]

Plot summaries

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The Steerswoman

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Steerswoman Rowan is investigating strange jewels that have been found scattered across the land. She begins traveling with Bel, a warrior from the Outskirts with a belt of these jewels. They are attacked twice by wizards' soldiers, and the Steerswomen conclude that the wizards are trying to prevent Rowan's investigation. Rowan renounces her status as Steerswoman so she can lie and travel undercover. Meanwhile, teenaged Will has run away from his small town. He has a talent for making things explode, much in the way wizards do sometimes. He joins Rowan and Bel, in the belief they will help him become a wizard's apprentice.

Rowan and Bel infiltrate the fortress of two wizards, where Rowan is captured. Rowan shares information freely with the wizards, without asking any questions which they might refuse to answer. She gleans that they are following orders from a secret higher wizard, Slado. Bel and Will free her, using Will's exploding magic to destroy the wizards' fortress.

Rowan meets with another wizard, and informs him that it is useless for Slado to try to prevent her investigation, as the progress of information cannot be stopped. She explains that the gems are pieces of a crashed Guidestar, which Rowan now knows to be an orbital satellite used by wizards for their magic. A demonstration of Will's magic convinces this wizard to accept Will as an apprentice. Will departs with the promise that he will share the wizards' secrets with the Steerswomen if he discovers that their secrecy is not motivated by good reasons.

The Outskirter's Secret

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After surviving the attempts on her life in the first book, Rowan continues her investigation of the mystery of the blue gems. Now knowing they are fragments of a fallen Guidestar, she embarks on a journey to the location where it is believed to have fallen. This journey takes her through the Outskirts, a region with different biology, human culture, and environmental conditions from the Inner Lands, where Rowan is from. Rowan and Bel cross the Inner Lands into the Outskirts, and meet multiple tribes of Outskirters, eventually agreeing to travel north with a group. Through their travels, encounters with other tribes, and wizard's minions, the stakes are increasingly raised. After the wizards send a devastating attack that nearly kills the entire tribe, and wipes out multiple others, both Rowan and the Outskirters are forced to reckon with new concepts and future disaster, and begin preparations to join forces.[5][6]

Reception

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Jo Walton has called the Steerswoman "terrific fun to read", with "really good prose",[1] while James Nicoll stated that it was "what SF should aspire to be".[4] Pornokitsch has described The Steerswoman as "a lovely example of an epic story driven by brains over brawn, and wit over magical destiny", noting that "unlike many of its contemporaries, [it] has not aged badly".[7]

Jo Walton said of the series "It's a very difficult trick to have revelations within a story that mean different things to the reader and the characters, but Kirstein dances over this constant abyss with delicate grace."[1] Richard Marcus reviewed the series for Blog Critics and said "Ms. Kirstein has created marvellous characters that make the themes she is addressing all the more real."[6]

In 2012, The Steerswoman was included in Damien Broderick and Paul Di Filippo's book Science Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985-2010, a continuation of the 1985 Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Walton, Jo (2008-10-30). "Not only science fiction, but more science fictional than anything else: Rosemary Kirstein's Steerswoman books". Reactor. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  2. ^ a b c Doctorow, Cory (2024-05-04). "Rosemary Kirstein's "The Steerswoman"". Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  3. ^ Carey, Elisabeth. "The Steerswoman's Road -- Rosemary Kirstein". New England Science Fiction Association, Inc. Retrieved 2024-08-22.
  4. ^ a b "The Steerswoman". James Nicoll Reviews. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  5. ^ "The Outskirter's Secret". James Nicoll Reviews. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  6. ^ a b Marcus, Richard (2005-11-07). "Blog Critics Book Review: The Steerswomen Series by Rosemary Kirstein". Blogcritics. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  7. ^ I Read 14 Books - And You Won't Believe What Happened Next!, by Jared, at Pornokitsch; published April 28, 2017; retrieved September 18, 2018
  8. ^ Broderick, Damien (2012). Science fiction: the 101 best novels, 1985-2010. New York: Nonstop Press. pp. 53–55. ISBN 978-1-933065-39-7 – via Internet Archive.
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