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Glorious Treason [Mass Market Paperback]

C.J. Ryan (Author)
2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 29, 2005
A brainy intergalactic beauty must save a backwater planet from annihilation by its most treacherous enemies: The 33rd-century titans of corporate greed who rule her world….

Gloria VanDeen’s special brand of smarts, sexiness, and raw courage has won her a promotion within the Department of Extraterrestrial Affairs. For her first assignment, she’s been dispatched to the planet Sylvania on a voter registration drive. But Gloria knows the real score. Sylvania is an Unincorporated Imperial Territory with murky homesteading laws. Once Gloria “democratizes” the planet, her ex-husband, the Emperor himself, plans to pillage it for Fergusite–the priceless emerald crystals that have lured boomers for light-years.

With mining operations set to begin, Sylvania’s beleaguered populace are looking to Gloria to save their world. Of course, countermanding the Emperor’s wishes is treason to the highest degree. With the eyes of the galaxy on her, it’s up to Gloria to choose between saving her neck–and preventing a boomerang that could destroy the Empire forever.…

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About the Author

C.J. Ryan is the pseudonym of an author who lives and works in Philadelphia. This is his second science fiction novel.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One


THEY CALLED HIM OLD ABEL, AND HE HAD BEEN there since the beginning--before the beginning, really. He wandered freely, almost randomly, through the valleys and forests, finding shelter when he needed it in natural caves and depressions or in the flimsy lean-tos he built, then abandoned as his moods and whims dictated. No one knew his age, but it was considerable, and it was a mystery where and how he obtained his food, clothing, and other presumed necessities of life. Not that he needed much.

He was a small, stoop-shouldered man with a scraggly white beard, long, tangled hair, and sharp, suspicious eyes the color of the evening sky before a storm. His voice, on the rare occasions when he used it, sounded like a stick being dragged through dry leaves. He appeared and disappeared without preamble, and although he was recognized throughout the mining camps and sparse clusters of tumbledown shacks that dotted the slopes of the valley, no one could claim to know him. He seemed neither alien nor entirely human--a species unto himself, indigenous and mysterious.

Sylvania was his world, as far as it was anyone's, and even the nabobs in the Lodge and the swaggering boomrats in the town and the camps treated him with a wary, deferential respect. When they saw him coming, leaning heavily on his wooden staff and lugging a sackful of Spirit-knew-what over his shoulder, the miners paused in their work and nodded to him. Some even ventured a greeting, perhaps receiving a nod of recognition in return; perhaps not. The bolder souls among them occasionally invited him to share their dinner, and sometimes he did. He might even engage in something that passed for conversation, exchanging a few words about the weather: a topic on which he was considered--in the absence of meteorological satellites--the ultimate local authority. He knew to the hour when rain would begin or end, and precisely how high up the slopes it would turn to snow. On other subjects, he had little or nothing to say, but he listened carefully to the words of the boomrats about the progress of their diggings, the latest troubles with Grunfeld and his thugs, or the new whore down at Elba's.

He rarely bothered with the town these days, and when he did, people made way for him and whispered behind his back, telling the newcomers--and there were many of them now--that this strange, threadbare apparition was just Old Abel, the local "character," as if that explained everything that needed to be known about him. Elba gave him food and drinks and sometimes joined him at his table. He was even believed to spend time in the rooms upstairs--but if he did, the whores didn't talk about it. Some of the older boomers might buy him drinks in return for a few minutes of his almost wordless company. And then he would be gone again, quietly retreating to his silent wilderness.

A few of the boomrats actively sought him out in the forests, convinced that Old Abel knew better than anyone just where to find outcrops of the glimmering green crystals whose discovery, three years ago, had lured them here across the light-years. But Old Abel could seldom be found unless he wanted to be, and he had nothing at all to say on the subject that obsessed the boomers. His silence only served to convince them that he was in possession of secret knowledge that, if they had it, would make them wealthy beyond calculation. But it was no easier to find Old Abel than it was to find the crystals themselves; in fact, it was more difficult, for the Fergusite crystals rimmed the broad valley and littered its streambeds, but there was only one Abel, and he moved as he would.

Exactly what Abel knew, or might know, was a subject of endless debate around the campfires and cookstoves. Some advanced the opinion that he knew nothing at all and was, in fact, simply the ignorant, witless old hermit he appeared to be--but they could not really bring themselves to believe that. Others were convinced that Old Abel had a secret cache somewhere up in the mountains, and lived a life of luxury and ease when no one was looking. A few even suggested that he was really an Imperial agent, spying on the boomrats for the Empire, or for Dexta. Or for the Lodge, or one of the corporate titans.

The oldsters--men like Bill McKechnie and Amos Strunk--knew better, but made no attempt to dispute the opinions of the latecomers. They kept their own counsel and merely smiled as they listened to the theories come gushing forth like water through a sluice. But Bill and Amos had heard the Voice, and most of the newbies hadn't.

They didn't talk much about the Voice. Those who hadn't heard it were convinced that the Voice was simply the delusion of men who had spent too much time in the silent hills of this lonely world, and some of those who had heard it feared that the doubters might be right. The easily frightened among them had taken heed of the Voice and quickly packed up their meager belongings and left the planet as soon as they could. Others, with stronger spines and a more resolute nature, had defied the Voice and remained at their diggings, but kept an ear to the wind and tended to jump at sudden noises.

The Voice seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere, and whispered to them at odd moments as they squatted in the cold, rushing waters, panning for crystals, or sat among the high crags, fussing with their plasma drills. It came to them in the dead of night or in the blaze of noon, on the shining outcrops of the cliff faces or in the gloom of the forests, and it spoke different words to different men. To most, it breathed in soft, insistent tones, "Go away. Leave me alone." To Bill McKechnie and Amos Strunk, it had said only, "Don't hurt me."

Old Abel wouldn't talk about the Voice. "I hear what I hear," he had said one night at Bill McKechnie's campfire. "And you hear what you hear."

***

What Abel heard one morning in March of 3217, as the Empire reckoned time, was not the Voice, but a cry of pain and outrage. It echoed down from the high reaches of the slopes, up near the snow line, where some of the newbies had been testing their luck. Abel peered upward from the edge of the forest, where he had spent the night, and saw two men he recognized even from this great distance, and a third that he didn't know--and never would.

The two he knew were Karl Cleveland and Hank Frezzo--big, tough, distinctive men who worked for the Mayor, the Honorable Kevin Grunfeld, tsar of the town of Greenlodge and anything else he cared to be tsar of. Cleveland and Frezzo held a third man between them, grasping each arm at the shoulder while their victim's feet kicked frantically at empty air. With a minimum of effort and only a final dying scream to mark the moment, the two tossed the third over the edge of the cliff face, sending him pinwheeling downward a hundred meters or more to the jumbled pile of scree at the base of the precipice. They peered over the edge for a few seconds, evidently satisfied with their work, then walked away and out of Abel's line of sight.

Abel waited a while to be sure they were gone, then laboriously picked his way upward through the scree to the place where the shattered body of the newbie had finally come to rest. Even if Abel had known the man, he would not have been able to recognize the smashed face that stared sightlessly upward toward the cold sun of Sylvania. Abel didn't touch the body or attempt to scavenge anything useful from his kit, although others undoubtedly would when they found him. Nothing was easy to get or hold on to on this planet, and even life itself was but a slippery possession.

He liked the newbies even less than he liked the oldsters, but Abel found himself feeling sorry for the dead man. Somewhere, perhaps a thousand or more light-years away, at the other end of the Empire, this man had once had a home, maybe even a family. When they heard the news--and they would eventually, for Dexta was remarkably efficient in such matters--they would be saddened and mournful. Or perhaps not; perhaps the dead man was a good-for-nothing son of a bitch, like so many of the boomers, and the Empire would be a better place without him in it. Abel didn't know and didn't really care.

But he cared about Sylvania, and was disheartened by what this and other such incidents must inevitably mean for his world. Sooner or later, the Empire would have to do something about it. More boomers were already on their way, and now they must be joined by the grim, gray bureaucrats of Dexta, who ran the Empire and enforced its rules. And Dexta, in turn, would soon be followed by the corporate behemoths, who would rape this quiet valley, then kill it, as surely as Grunfeld's men had killed this sad specimen crumpled at his feet.

And what, Abel wondered, would the Voice have to say about that?

Chapter Two


THE TWO MOST POWERFUL MEN IN THE EMPIRE stared at themselves and each other in the gently rippling waters of the reflecting pool, the replica of the Taj looming above them in carefully crafted splendor. The original had been destroyed in an alien attack during the Second Interstellar War, more than seven hundred years earlier in pre-Imperial days, before the men of Earth had come to dominate this corner of the galaxy. Reconstructed as one of six Imperial Palaces scattered around the terrestrial continents, the Taj Mahal no longer seemed a monument to love but to human persistence, ingenuity, and arrogance. The two men embodied those same qualities.

Norman Mingus was the first to break the spell of the reflection and look away. Tall, spare, slowed but unbowed by his 130 years, Mingus had a face that was pink and unlined and might have belonged to a retired and much-loved schoolteacher. Instead, it belonged to the Secretary of the Department of Extraterrestrial Affairs.

The Emperor Charles V, forty-seventh in an unbroken line stretching back nearly seven centuries, lingered another moment with his reflected image. When at Agra, he affected garb...

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Spectra (November 29, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0553587773
  • ISBN-13: 978-0553587777
  • Product Dimensions: 4.3 x 0.9 x 6.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,868,911 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 Reviews
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Read Glorious Treason FIRST., December 15, 2005
By 
David Brims (Brisbane, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Glorious Treason (Mass Market Paperback)

Comedy. Tragedy. For best results, mix carefully.
The Greeks knew it. Shakespeare perfected it.
Dexta didn't quite get the mix right.
Glorious Treason did.

Glorious Treason is a more balanced book than Dexta. Dexta was full of frenetic ideas, but there were so many stereotypes flying around it was difficult to see the forest for the trees. This is still erotic comedy, but Glorious Treason plays down the Dexta Menagerie, has no genocide and colonialism issues simmering, and above all, it's a human book, full of human conflicts - there are no pigeonholed alien races to distract you from human plotting. And the plotting is MARVELOUS. There is a lot more bureaucratic meddling and bungling and playing several different sides of an issue. In short, there're more shades of gray, particularly from the good guys. The bad guys are still a little overplayed, but Charles makes up for the rest of them. His connection to Gloria adds some style to the crap he's hurling! I look forward to seeing more of him as a villain in The Fifth Quadrant.

And because this is such a human story, there's real pathos when tragedy strikes. When things went wrong in Dexta, you felt "Oh, sure, this'll turn out fine!" But this time I really felt it, and that's the way it should be. I felt strongly that that element was missing from the first book, but it comes together here.

You also get some feel for the deeper messages here. You really had to ignore the genocide, colonialism, corporate greed, religious, moral and sexual issues in Dexta to have any chance of enjoying it. They bogged it down. But this time you can savour the environmental, corporate greed, and religious themes, because there are fewer messages, and they're more deftly played.

Which brings us to the Voice. I gave 2 stars just for the Voice, which really made this book for me - it's hilarious, deftly played, and the commentary on religion is spot on. There's a conversation at the end of the book between Gloria and a Spiritist Bishop that had me busting my sides, and I have the feeling Gloria will live to regret the famous words "I have an idea!"

I have one major issue with this book, for which I docked a star. In bureaucratic messes as in life there are no clean endings. What happens to the Five at the end of the book is too convenient. Sure, it wraps things up neatly, but sometimes things should be left dangling. If she set out to do it, maybe Gloria should have gotten away with one or two, but all Five? Cleanly? That was too cute by half.

Overall assessment - read this book FIRST - get some pathos for the characters and some comfort with the sexual innuendo - then go back and read Dexta. You'll stand a much better chance of enjoying both books.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Can I really be one of the few who like this series?, August 28, 2006
This review is from: Glorious Treason (Mass Market Paperback)
I was shocked at the negative reviews for this book. Strangly, I enjoyed this sci-fi romp. Some reviewers question where the science is: but this whole novel revolves around a rare, generally manually processed, crystal, that is used in Tao space for very very fast space travel. How much more sci-fi can you get? Some reviewers didn't quite like the Dexta bureacracy-yet I think it's a marvelous Machiavellian creation and a nifty counterpoint to an Emperor who holds a lot of power. While it's true there is some sex and details on the skimpy clothing, I don't feel that it is extraneous. It simply clarifies the cultural norms and expectations in the 33rd century. I'm not saying this is some deep 2001 satire on the state of being and the reason for creation-it's not; and CJ Ryan is clearly not trying to go there. But it's definitly a good romp and I recommend it.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Science Fiction or Science Fashion, July 2, 2006
By 
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This review is from: Glorious Treason (Mass Market Paperback)
This might have been an interesting book had the author concentrated more on the plot and less on the peripheral items. the heroine is pretty, intelligent and has an interesting career and background. The author, however, appears to place more emphasis on her fashion and sexual exploits than on developing her as a real character.

Is it really necessary to describe every skimpy outfit that the heroine wore and every sexual encounter that she has in order to further the plot? It appears that the author feels compelled to throw some of this in every few pages in a poorly disguised attempt to hold the reader's interest.

I was also disappointed by the actual plot itself. Some of the items were so transparent that the reader could predict them pages before the heroine came to the obvious conclusion. Could anybody not see the significance of the ski lodge?

Other items were never adequately explained and left the reader guessing why the obvious was omitted. If she knew that the lodge was bugged why didn't she ask Abel if he could provide some evidence?

Hopefully, in future novels, the author will leave out most of the fashion and the sex and build her character into one with the depth to be more interesting.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
imperial governor, two bugs, utility skimmer, plasma drills, distortion generators, plasma pistol, corporate reps
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Pizen Flats, Eminent Domain, Slim Jim, Judge Kershaw, Myron Vigo, Maddie Mitchell, Ted Oberlin, Miz Gloria, City Hall, Old Abel, Thomas Shoop, Mayor Grunfeld, Norman Mingus, Jill Clymer, Stu Eckstein, Pug Ellison, Big Twelve, Jillian Clymer, Dina Westerbrook, Internal Security, Claude Rankus, Raul Tellemacher, Joe Pollas, Bishop Arkwright, Palmer Ellison
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