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Legacy: A Novel (The Way Book 3) Kindle Edition
The Way is a tunnel to the multiverse, infinite possible realities throughout the universe. From its entranceway in Axis City, the space station at the center of the asteroid-starship Thistledown, one may travel to any world and any time.
Lamarckia is a world very much like Earth, but populated by shapeshifting biological forms. More than four thousand colonists have illegally used the Way to settle there, and the ruling gatekeepers fear that the interaction between humans and aliens could prove devastating to the future of both species.
Now, Olmy Ap Sennon has been sent to Lamarckia to spy on the colonists and investigate their effect on their new home. As he witnesses their struggle to survive their unforgiving environment—and each other—Olmy experiences all of the joy and heartache that comes from a life worth living, in “a stunning SF novel that extrapolates a scientifically complex future from the basic stuff of human nature” (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Review
"Hard science and human interest intersect ingeniously in the prequel to Bear's Eon and Eternity....This is a stunning SF novel that extrapolates a scientifically complex future from the basic stuff of human nature." --Publishers Weekly (starred)
Review
PRAISE FOR
LEGACY
“A remarkable and utterly convincing feat of creation.”
—
KIRKUS REVIEWS, STARRED REVIEW
“Hard science and human interest intersect ingeniously in the prequel to Bear’s
Eon and
Eternity…. This is a stunning SF novel that extrapolates a scientifically complex future from the basic stuff of human nature.” —
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, STARRED REVIEW
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The sun hung two hand-spans above the horizon. Late morning, early evening: I could not judge. I stood on the crest of a low hill, between thick black trunks smooth as glass. Behind me, a dense enclosure of more black trunks. And ahead…detail rushed upon me; I sucked it in with frantic need.
Red and purple forest pushed over low boxy hills, fading to pink and lavender as the hills receded toward the horizon. Mist curled languidly between. Immense trees like the skeletons of cathedral towers punctuated the forest every few hundred meters, pink crowns perched atop four slender vaulting legs, rising high over the rest of the forest. Above the hills, sky beckoned crystal blue with mottled patches of more red and purple, as if reflecting the forest. In fact, the forest inhabited the sky: tethered gas-filled balloons ascended from the distant stands of black-trunked trees into thin shredded-ribbon clouds.
Everything glowed with serene yellow light and brilliant blood-hued life. Everything, related. For as far as the eye could see--what Darrow Jan Fima had called Elizabeth's Zone, one creature, one thing.
From where I stood, at the top of a rise overlooking the broad, dark olive Terra Nova River, Lamarckia hardly seemed violated. Not a human in sight, not a curl of smoke or rise of structure. Somewhere below, hidden in the tangle of smooth black trunks, huge round leaves, and purple fans, the ferry landing was supposed to be…And inland a few hundred meters along a dirt and gravel path, both hidden in the dense pack, the village of Moonrise.
I touched my clothes self-consciously. How out-of-place would I look?
I realized I had been holding my breath. I inhaled deeply. It was a sweet and startling breath. The air smelled of fresh water, grapes, tea leaves, and a variety of odors I can only describe as skunky-sweet. Rich aromas wafted from nearby extrusions resembling broad purple flowers, with fleshy centers. They smelled like bananas, spicy as cinnamon. The extrusions opened and closed, twitching at the end of each cycle. Then they withdrew altogether with thin, high chirps.
I reached out my hand to stroke the smooth black curve of a trunk. At my touch, the bark parted to form a kind of stoma, red and pink pulp within. A drop of translucent white fluid oozed from the gash, which quickly closed when I lifted my hand.
"Not a tree," I murmured. The Dalgesh report--by the original surveyors--had called them "arborid scions." And this was not a forest, but a silva.
There were no plants or animals as such on Lamarckia. The first surveyors, in the single day they had spent on the planet, had determined that within certain zones, all apparently individual organisms, called scions, in fact belonged to a larger organism, which they had called an ecos. No scion could breed by itself; they did not act alone. An ecos was a single genetic organism, creating within itself all the diverse parts of an ecosystem, spread over large areas--in some cases, dominating entire continents.
Each ecos was ruled, the surveyors had theorized, by what they called a seed mistress, or queen. Neither the surveyors--nor the immigrants, according to Jan Fima--had ever seen such a queen, however; understanding of Lamarckian biology and planetary science in general had still been primitive among the immigrants when the informer left.
Above, the black trunks spread great round parasol-leaves, broad as outstretched arms, powdery gray at their perimeters, rose and bloodred in their centers. The parasols rubbed edges in a canopy-clinging current of air, making a gentle shushing noise, like a mother calming an infant. Black granular dust fell in thin drifts on my head; not pollen, certainly not ash. I rubbed some between my fingers, smelled it, but did not taste.
The last light of the orange sun warmed my face. So this was not morning but evening; the day was ending. I savored the glow. It felt wonderfully, thrillingly familiar; but it was the first sunlight I had ever directly experienced. Until now, I had spent my whole life within Thistledown and the Way.
My terror passed into numb ecstasy. The sense of alien newness, of unfamiliar beauty, hit me like a drug; I was actually walking on a planet, a world like Earth, not within a hollowed-out rock.
Reluctantly, I turned from the sun's warmth and walked in shadow down an overgrown trail. If I had come out in the right place, this trail would lead to the Terra Nova River and the landing that served the village of Moonrise. Here, I had been told, I might catch a riverboat and travel to Calcutta, the largest town on the continent of Elizabeth's Land.
I wondered what sort of people I would meet. I imagined feral wretches, barely social, clustered in dark little towns, immersed in their own superstitions. Then I regretted the thought. Perhaps I had spent too much time among the Geshels, having so little respect for my own kind. But of course Lenk's people had gone beyond my own kind. Yanosh had characterized them as fanatic.
The moist air of the river valley sighed around me, like an invisible chilly flood. Picking my footsteps carefully, avoiding lines of finger-sized orange worms topped by feathery blue crests, I listened for any sounds, heard only the rubbed-silk hiss of air and the liquid mumble of the river.
The trail at least had once been traveled by humans. Dropped between the trunks, in a tangle of stone-hard "roots," I spotted a small scrap of crumpled plastic and knelt to pick it up. Spread open by my fingers, it was a blank page from an erasable notebook.
At least, I realized with considerably relief, I had not arrived before the human intruders. That would have meant I was truly trapped here, with no chance of returning until they arrived…Or someone came from the Hexamon to get me.
I pocketed the scrap. I still could not be sure how much time had passed since the arrival of Lenk and his followers.
Four thousand one hundred and fourteen illegal immigrants; as much as three decades between my arrival and theirs. What could they have done to Lamarckia in that time?
I pushed through a tangle of purple helixed blades. My feet sank into a grainy, boggy humus littered with pink shells and pebbles. No landing visible; no lights, no sign of river traffic. For a moment, I knelt and dug my fingers into the soil. It felt gritty and resilient at once--grains of sand and spongy corklike cubes half a centimeter on a side, suspended in inky fluid that globbed immiscibly amid drops of clear water. It looked for all the world like gardener's potting soil mixed with viscous ink.
I picked up a pink shell. Spiral, flat, like an ancient Earth ammonite, four or five centimeters across. I sniffed it; clean and sweet, with a watery, dusty smell backed by a ghost of roses and bananas. I poked it with a finger; it crushed easily.
More black powder fell in thin curtains nearby. I glanced up and saw what looked like an immense reddish-brown snake, banded with deep midnight blue, dozens of meters long and as thick across as my own body, twisted around and draped across the trunks and leaves above. It wriggled slowly, peristaltically. I could see neither its head nor its tail. With a clamping sensation in my throat and chest, I trotted down the trail, trying to get out from under the serpent.
The trail became thicker, overgrown by smaller red and purple plantlike forms, phytids, filling in between the arborids. I lost my way and had to listen for the sound of the river to orient myself.
Several minutes passed before I realized I was smelling something out of place, rich and gassy. During my walk, I had not once smelled mold or methane, not once felt the squelch of dead vegetation. Plants, trees--convenient words only--grew from soil that might have been prepared by diligent and cleanly gardeners. Only the pink shells, mired in the mud, gave a hint that anything here lived, then died, and in dying, left remains--
And this fresh scent of decay.
I thrashed down to the bank again and stared over the deep brownish water to the black silhouette of the opposite shore. Faint, broad patches of blue glow sprang up between the trees across the river. They sputtered and went out again. I could not be sure I had seen them. Then, high above, the undersides of the broad parasols flashed blue. Somewhere, high-pitched tuneless whistling. A flutter beneath the parasols: dark winged things carrying fibrous scraps. Something small and red darted past my face with an audible sniff.
The wind died. The night air sank. Fog danced and twisted in the middle of the river. With the silence came another whiff of decay. Animal flesh, rotting. I was sure of that much.
I followed the scent Back up the bank, stepping gingerly over writhing purple creepers, guided by faint blue flashes through the undergrowth, I found the remains of the trail.
Something made a sound between a squeak and a sigh and scuttled on three legs out of the undergrowth: a pasty white creature the size of a small dog, triangular in shape. It stood by a black trunk and regarded me through patient, empty eye-spots mounted along a red central line. It pulsed and made tiny whistling sounds. Its skin crawled in what I took to be disgust at my presence. But apparently disgust was only disapproval--or something else entirely--for it did not retreat. Instead, it slowly clasped and crawled its way up a trunk, opened a stoma with a tap of its pointed tail-foot, and began to suck milky fluid. I watched in fascination as its white body swelled. Then, half again as large as before, the creature dropped from the trunk, landed in the dirt with a rubbery plop, and crabbed away with a half circling gait on the down-bent points of its triangle.
Twilight was quickly obscuring everything. A double oxbow of stars pricked through the thin clouds. Ahead, a flickering orange light drew my attention: a torch or flame. I pushed toward the orange light and found the landing and the dirt road that pointed inland to Moonrise.
The landing began as a broad platform at t...
Product details
- ASIN : B00J3EU3WE
- Publisher : Open Road Media Sci-Fi & Fantasy; Reprint edition (April 1, 2014)
- Publication date : April 1, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 5.5 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 547 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #131,414 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Greg Bear is the author of more than thirty books, spanning thrillers, science fiction, and fantasy, including Blood Music, Eon, The Forge of God, Darwin's Radio, City at the End of Time, and Hull Zero Three. His books have won numerous international prizes, have been translated into more than twenty-two languages, and have sold millions of copies worldwide. Over the last twenty-eight years, he has also served as a consultant for NASA, the U.S. Army, the State Department, the International Food Protection Association, and Homeland Security on matters ranging from privatizing space to food safety, the frontiers of microbiology and genetics, and biological security.
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Customers find the book engaging and enjoyable. They appreciate the clever ideas and well-crafted stories with imaginative writing. However, some readers found the writing too wordy and boring.
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Customers enjoyed the book. They found it interesting and a good science fiction read for teenagers.
"If you like really good, well written hard core science fiction then you should read anything and everything that Greg Bear has written...." Read more
"...I took entirely different things from it the second time. I enjoyed it both tmies...." Read more
"...I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I hope that the next two will be as good." Read more
"...A story of an alternate ecology, but done poorly. Even the vagueness if intelligent subplot was done poorly...." Read more
Customers find the story engaging. They appreciate the clever ideas and well-crafted plot. Readers praise the imaginative writing and descriptions of the world. The twists and turns keep them hooked until the end.
"...count on Greg Bear for well plotted stories, creative writing and inventive ideas. He always holds my interest and this book was no exception." Read more
"This prequel to Eon is an interesting introduction to the remarkable world of Lamarkia and its inhabitants...." Read more
"I liked the general plot line of a group of people that had been traveling through space for hundreds of years in search of a new planet inside of..." Read more
"There are some interesting and clever ideas about how humans could live on planets woth dfft ecos. I'll be moving on to the next book in the series." Read more
Customers enjoy the writing quality and find the author's world remarkable.
"You can always count on Greg Bear for well plotted stories, creative writing and inventive ideas...." Read more
"...Bear really brings a story to life. A remarkable author writing of a remarkable world. Follow The Way to his world of Lamarkia." Read more
"...I found the descriptions of the 'ecoi' very interesting and enjoy that kind of writing...." Read more
"Excellent author...needlessly cryptic prose." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2017You can always count on Greg Bear for well plotted stories, creative writing and inventive ideas. He always holds my interest and this book was no exception.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2016I had just finished Moving Mars and doc into this book. I may have wanted to start with the first book written but thought I would approach the series chronologically.
In terms of sci-fi the book was light in science but heavy on the politics of following visionary leaders and strong governments. I kept thinking this was like Timeline in a way. The characters were well thought out and the story was good. I felt that the story could've used a little more depth but the twists and turns were good.
It does bring up great thoughts of changing ecosystems to fit our needs and the damage that could be done. That was the main takeaway from the story and it shows that we're minor players in this system.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2023Not sure what Bear did here, but not his best work by far. A story of an alternate ecology, but done poorly. Even the vagueness if intelligent subplot was done poorly. And sending in a powerless person sans means of communication to examine a lost world? No means to report back? Not exactly what any sane society like the Hexagon would do. Beyond credulity.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2021My favorite of the three books in this trilogy. It is the last but also a prequel of sorts to the first two and reminds me of some G Wolfe books I’ve read, in terms of tone, themes and craftsmanship. This is the story of how Ser Olmy became who he is, within a larger play of human and plant ecologies sorting out who they will be and why, told from the first person perspective of Olmy, as a retrospective accounting.
I have nothing bad to say about this book and only advise that it not be read out of order with the first two. It is really well done.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2014This prequel to Eon is an interesting introduction to the remarkable world of Lamarkia and its inhabitants. Bear's imagination never seems to diminish. His new world is an interesting concept . His treatment of the human reaction to it is somewhat predictable, but also quite reasonable given humanities previous interactions with new worlds. An unfortunate inclination for violent intercourse and power grubbing seem to follow us wherever we go. Will Lamarkia be any different?
Bear really brings a story to life. A remarkable author writing of a remarkable world. Follow The Way to his world of Lamarkia.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2015If you like really good, well written hard core science fiction then you should read anything and everything that Greg Bear has written. On the other hand if your preference is for comic books you should look elsewhere.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2018I liked the general plot line of a group of people that had been traveling through space for hundreds of years in search of a new planet inside of an asteroid used for mining operations. I also liked the interactions of the protagonist with his lady friend during their ocean adventure. I also found interesting the subjugation of women once these explorers found their "Eden". Leaving nearly all their technology behind, a sect leaves the asteroid via The Way to an uninhabited planet, where a Lord of the Flies scenario begins to unfold.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2018There are some interesting and clever ideas about how humans could live on planets woth dfft ecos. I'll be moving on to the next book in the series.
Top reviews from other countries
- fastreaderReviewed in Canada on August 31, 2011
5.0 out of 5 stars fastreader
Greg Bear is another science fiction writter who knows how to spin a tale and keep you page turning to find out what's going to happen next. Highly recommended author and this series of 3 books is also recommended
- 8ightballReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 25, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Eon Book 3 Legacy
Only got into Greg Bear recently. Found his work facinating. Hi tech scifi very well written. Read 2 previous Eon books. This one is a spin off when leading character was a young man. This was written in the 80's but very advanced for it's time. Can't wait to read more Greg Bear's work. Would highly recommend.
-
CzarReviewed in Italy on August 14, 2012
1.0 out of 5 stars Tutto sommato deludente
Nonostante fossi lanciato nella trilogia Eon-Eternity-Legacy, questo terzo volume è deludente per limitatezza di respiro e proposta di temi.
Sinossi:
Il romanzo narra di un giovane Olmy, uno degli eroi della saga, che nella sua giovinezza si è arruolato in una missione alla scoperta di un gruppo di ribelli rifugiatisi su un pianeta che avrebbe dovuto essere un nuovo paradiso per questo gruppo di reietti. Olmy si intrufola sul pianetca come "spia" e ne segue le vicende, trovandosi suo malgrado sempre più coinvolto negli eventi.
Commento:
Nonostante la presenza di temi interessanti, come la biodiversità, la biocontaminazione, la cronica sconsideratezza dell'Uomo (come insegna la storia) o l'uso della guerra e delle stragi per fini "machiavellici", questo romanzo è una delusione. La trama si sviluppa lenta in una ricerca che ricorda molto una delle avventure del capitano Aubrey di Patrick O'Brian. Il contenuto "fantascientifico" si espone lentamente, senza grande spessore ed è facilmente intuibile decine di pagine in anticipo, una volta compresa la "biologia" del pianeta. Olmy si salva, come annunciato, visto che deve essere vivo per il clou della saga Eon-Eternity che si svolge centinaia di anni nel futuro. Lettura conclusa con fatica.
Versione ebook:
Buon libro ben impaginato senza errori e con divisione bookmark/capitoli.
- macReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 19, 2012
4.0 out of 5 stars Eon 3
I enjoyed this story. It's not a continuation of the story of the Thistledown which was what I was expecting in the third book. Instead it concentrates on the adventures of Olmy ( a younger Olmy than in the previous two books) as an undercover investigator on a planet colonised by dissidents from the Thistledown. It's completely different to the previous two books in setting and content and I found it quite absorbing.
- Rob StevensonReviewed in Canada on December 7, 2016
3.0 out of 5 stars Odd and oddly compelling
This book was supposed to be part of a trilogy. It's not, not at all. Yes, it's a prequel, but the only thing it has in common with the other two books is one character and a bit of background.
It was difficult to like at first, and difficult to read, filled as it is by odd names and settings. For a good part of the book it seems to be a typical sailing yarn, only with different terms for the ship parts. But it's also a tale of ecosystems, and of human societies and their interaction with the ecosystems. But none of that hangs together well enough for my taste.
Read the other two for mind stretching science fiction. Read this one only if you're a completist.