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The Gap Cycle #1

The Gap Into Conflict: The Real Story

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Angus Thermopyle was an ore pirate and a murderer; even the most disreputable asteroid pilots of Delta Sector stayed locked out of his way. Those who didn't ended up in the lockup - or dead. But when Thermopyle arrived at Mallory's Bar & Sleep with a gorgeous woman by his side the regulars had to take notice. Her name was Morn Hyland, and she had been a police officer - until she met up with Thermopyle.

But one person in Mallorys Bar wasn't intimidated. Nick Succorso had his own reputation as a bold pirate and he had a sleek frigate fitted for deep space. Everyone knew that Thermopyle and Succorso were on a collision course. What nobody expected was how quickly it would be over - or how devastating victory would be. It was common enough example of rivalry and revenge - or so everyone thought. The REAL story was something entirely different.

241 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

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About the author

Stephen R. Donaldson

164 books2,571 followers
Stephen Reeder Donaldson is an American fantasy, science fiction, and mystery novelist; in the United Kingdom he is usually called "Stephen Donaldson" (without the "R"). He has also written non-fiction under the pen name Reed Stephens.

EARLY LIFE AND EDUCATION:

Stephen R. Donaldson was born May 13, 1947 in Cleveland, Ohio. His father, James, was a medical missionary and his mother, Ruth, a prosthetist (a person skilled in making or fitting prosthetic devices). Donaldson spent the years between the ages of 3 and 16 living in India, where his father was working as an orthopaedic surgeon. Donaldson earned his bachelor's degree from The College of Wooster and master's degree from Kent State University.

INSPIRATIONS:

Donaldson's work is heavily influenced by other fantasy authors such as J.R.R. Tolkien, Roger Zelazny, Joseph Conrad, Henry James, and William Faulkner. The writers he most admires are Patricia A. McKillip, Steven Erikson, and Tim Powers.

It is believed that a speech his father made on leprosy (whilst working with lepers in India) led to Donaldson's creation of Thomas Covenant, the anti-hero of his most famous work (Thomas Covenant). The first book in that series, Lord Foul's Bane, received 47 rejections before a publisher agreed to publish it.

PROMINENT WORK:
Stephen Donaldson came to prominence in 1977 with the The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, which is centred around a leper shunned by society and his trials and tribulations as his destiny unfolds. These books established Donaldson as one of the most important figures in modern fantasy fiction.

PERSONAL LIFE:
He currently resides in New Mexico.

THE GRADUAL INTERVIEW


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Displaying 1 - 30 of 572 reviews
Profile Image for Gavin.
934 reviews410 followers
March 10, 2016
This was my second attempt at reading a Stephen R. Donaldson novel. My first attempt was way back in my teens when I picked up Lord Foul's Bane. My read of the first Thomas Covenant book went so poorly that I never even finished the story. I had loved the concept and found Donaldson's writing to be fairly engaging, but I was too disgusted with the character of Thomas to continue reading his story. It was my hope that The Real Story would have more of what I liked and less of what I did not. Unfortunately that was a forlorn hope.

The Real Story was incredibly dark and brutal and proved to be an uncomfortable read. Mostly due to all the abuse and rape depicted within the story. I'm actually convinced that Donaldson might have a bit of a rape fetish! The characters did not help matters as none of the three main characters were particularly likeable. The main character Angus Thermopyle was even more loathsome than Thomas Covenant.

Despite a whole host of issues I did still find the actual story fairly intriguing and engaging. On the surface it is the tale of how the handsome swashbuckling pirate Nick Succorso outwits fellow pirate, and a man of dark reputation, Angus Thermopyle and in doing so saves the trapped beauty, Morn Hyland. The structure of the story was intriguing. We got the tale from the perspective of the casual observer, and then the tale from the perspective of the more discerning observer, before finally getting the real story from the POV of Angus himself. The story was one of rivalry, deception, and treachery.

I found the story quite engaging. I'd likely have enjoyed the tale more if the characters had been more likeable and the content less disturbing.

I'm not sure if I'll press on with the rest of the series. I can tolerate a bleak and depressing book when it is short like this one was, but the sequels are far larger in size. The slight glimmer of hope might be that the second half of the story focused less on the abuse of the captured Morn and more on the battle of wits between Angus, Nick, and Morn.

Rating: 3.5 stars.

Audio Note: This was narrated by Scott Brick. This story actually played to Brick's strengths as a narrator. The cast was tiny and the story was bleak so it suited Brick's wonderfully mournful sounding voice.
Profile Image for notgettingenough .
1,052 reviews1,264 followers
June 12, 2010
3am. Surely the right time.

Call me completely insane, but I've agreed to read this (I wrote a few months ago)

....after a conversation that went like this:

Me: I hate Thomas Covenant
Noela: But you have to read the Gap series
Me: Huh?
Noela: It is about a girl who has the most appalling things happen to her. You read a bit, put it down thinking 'that's it! No more' but then you can't help yourself. You have to know what dreadful thing is going to happen to her next. You have to!
Me: Grumble, grumble, grumble, but...okay. Maybe. But.

The fact is, I have to confess, that I could scarcely stop thinking about anything else. I scoured Melbourne bookshops looking for copies, but TC is it. Donaldson just might as well not have bothered with writing another interminably long series. I asked everybody if they had a copy I could borrow. Have you ever tried doing this on the tram? Coffee shops? In the street? It doesn't work.

Finally, I happened to be in Hatchards http://www.hatchards.co.uk/, and there it was. Sorry, so sorry. I'm made a plug for a bookshop that isn't Amazon. This isn't usually done on goodreads. But. GO TO YOUR LOCAL BOOKSHOP!!!

Hesitates before saying this next thing. I don't know if Donaldson is a good enough writer to be doing this incredibly ambitious thing, creating the superbly flawed Angus Thermopyle. But if that is so, it doesn't matter. It is quite impossible to put this book down. Having finished book one, I'm desperate to read book two, but for logistical reasons I can't. Not until I've read HP AND the second two volumes of Northern Lights. I'm being held hostage, you see. In the attic bedroom of a house in Didsbury (hellllpppppppppppppppp). I'm not allowed out until I finish these books.

Actually, it isn't dissimilar to what happens in this book to Morn, except that nobody is doing despicable thing to degrade and break me. Well, anti-Northern Lights readers might disagree there.

If you're a boy you'll love this because it is about space ships and stations and pirates and desperate adventures and a girl who is trapped by a zone implant into doing whatever your (um) heart desires. If you are a girl, I'm buggered if I know why you'll love this, but you will.


Profile Image for Dirk Grobbelaar.
600 reviews1,139 followers
February 5, 2020
I’d had the Gap series on my radar for a while, so when I came across the 55 essential Space Operas according to Barnes & Noble and saw The Real Story on there I decided to have at it.

Having finished the book (fairly quickly as it turned out – it’s not a very long read) I’m a bit out of sorts as to how to review it. It certainly was nothing like I had expected. It also isn’t the easiest of reads; despite reading quickly it contains a lot of scenes depicting things like rape, um, rape and more rape. I guess it’s integral to the plot, which deals with control and fear and submission and the like, but this kind of thing always makes me uneasy. The author basically places the reader inside the head of someone who commits any number of twisted deeds, expecting the reader to eventually identify with the character and, well, feel something akin to empathy for him when things start going awry (and after he has provided the inner motivations of the character). Or something to this effect.

It makes sense to read this for literary merit, I suppose, since the author pulls a bit of a switcheroo with his character “types”. There aren’t many characters here (only three, of which only two feature prominently), so it’s more of a “chamber” space opera than a proper space opera. It’s a grim and edgy read, with some serious psychological tension, if a bit screwed up. Thing is, you’ll have to decide for yourself what is excusable / acceptable and just how willing you are to “forgive”, if you will. If I’m rambling, it’s because I clearly haven’t sorted out my thoughts about all of this yet.

As such, I find it hard to rate (I have to try and view it without letting personal bias interfere). There are some interesting elements, and it looks like the series only really picks up from the second book (which I may actually read, since the grimy used future feel of the story appealed to me). Even so, I can hardly give this book much more than 2.5 stars.
Profile Image for Joe.
13 reviews2 followers
September 10, 2007
The Gap really explores the cycle of hero/victim/villain. Between the first book and the last, the cycle has turned atleast twice, with the main characters exploring and fulfilling all the roles.

The Real story is a brutal book. No mistake, its a hard read. But between Donaldson's writing, and the compelling back story, it really sets the stage for a wider story. The characters do develop and change over time. This is a dark book, with dark characters, and is by no means a book that is intended for non-mature readers. The rest of the series is in much the same vein.
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,006 reviews418 followers
October 24, 2017
I have a negative past with Stephen R. Donaldson’s work. I loathe the Thomas Covenant series and I could only read the first book of the Mordant’s Need duality. I had the second book on my TBR until I realized that the thought of picking it up depressed me profoundly and I decided to let it go.

So it was with distinct reservations that I picked up The Gap into Conflict and no one was more surprised than me when I actually enjoyed it. The subject matter is difficult, but the insights into the main character, Angus Thermopyle, were worth the struggle. And, as Donaldson promises, we get the “real story” about what is going on in his psyche. It’s not pretty, but it is truthful, as he confronts his feelings and admits to himself that he maybe isn’t as rough & tough as he likes to think. It was kind of like getting a peek into the mind of someone like Ariel Castro, the Cleveland kidnapper.

I liked that no character was locked into a role, that everything kept shifting as the novel unfolded. Morn Hyland starts as a victim, but certainly doesn’t end that way. Nick Succorso is set up to look like a hero, but a small foreshadowing by Donaldson indicates that he is no white knight.

I never thought I would ever say this: I’m looking forward to the next book in this Donaldson series!

Book number 266 of my Science Fiction & Fantasy Reading Project.
January 15, 2022
When I first read the Gap in the mid 90s it had a huge impact on me. Firstly, becauce I realised how much I love the space opera settings and secondly, and most importantly, it was my first exposure into really bleak storytelling. Despicable realistic characters with little space for redemption. Characters that I could not relate back then because they were grown ups. Middle aged or more. So far from the characters of the majority of the well known fantasy series I was accustomed up to then.
The mix thrilled me. The series got better and better with every sequel and the ending was a blast. Perfectly fitting.
Since then I always rate the Gap in my top five series.

And finally, I am able to do the reread I have been hunting for years. To savour these books with my current mindset.
Admittedly, this first book is a dive in cold water. It is crude and harsh and unjust. Sometimes it feels like a play. I think Donaldson made it that way to to serve a purpose. To give birth to the powerful dynamics and relationships that will ignite and define this terrific grand tale of machiavellian politics, exploding action and disturbing sci-fi concepts.

If you really want to know what The Gap is not about I will quote the beginning of this book's epilogue.

"So the fair maiden was rescued. The swashbuckling pirate bore her away with all her beauty, and her tormentor was left to pay the price of his crimes."
Profile Image for MacWithBooksonMountains Marcus.
285 reviews8 followers
March 11, 2024
Donaldson’s The Real Story is as much a masterpiece as it is/can be disturbing; in short, you either love it or hate it. The setting grimy and dark; it is science fiction but that’s just a sideshow. In fact, this is an intense psychological thriller. Like I said, not for everyone. It puts you in the mind of a psychopath called, quite hmm may I say incongruently so, Thermopylae. See, there is nothing heroic about Angus Thermopylae. If he had lived in the 70s or 80s, he could have been right up there with Ted Bundy, Kemper, and the BTK strangler. Instead in a future time - the year remains undisclosed - Angus Thermopylae is a space pirate that is on a collision course with another pirate called Nick Succorso. Succorso, at least on the outside, is everything that Angus is not; charming, handsome in a rugged sense, and an inspiring leader to his crew. The third character is a female cop called Hyland, falling into the hands of Angus,a very unfortunate turn of fate for her indeed, we witness her profuse suffering at the hands of this twisted psychopath. Like any good writer, Donaldson abstains from any graphic descriptions, he dares the reader’s imagination to fill in the details. This proved rather disconcerting, for when I, as any true reader did just that, I almost got to the point where I considered shelving the book, in the proverbial sense for I’m reviewing the audio book. Fortunately, there is Succorso and with him springs hope from the concerned reader’s breast. He hatches a complex plan to rescue her, yet soon we find this is not a white knight rescuing damsels in distress plot. Succorso is in some ways just as bad as Angus (this is mostly hinted at but not yet born out by any of his actions). In the finale of this rather compact story (about five hours reading time) we realize that Angus is not the black and white character he was introduced to us. Some of the readers may even garner sympathy for him, at least this is how the author wants us to feel. Considering what Angus did to Hyland, well what can I say, a tall order for the writer, and a near impossibility of the writer’s own doing; for I’m giving it to you straight, Angus is one of the most revolting, disgusting, close to irredeemable characters that has ever come to life between the pages of fiction. (;
Profile Image for Miriam.
22 reviews11 followers
February 10, 2017
I have been a fan of Stephen R. Donaldson since I read the Thomas Covenant Chronicles in the 70s. In this new series, the Gap Chronicles, Donaldson moves to science fiction from fantasy. Be warned, this is a brutal series to read (like The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), but it is also a phenomenal study in character development. The first book is the most difficult, and really only sets the stage for the rest of the series. I read this series after it was completed so I was able to read it straight through and my copy of The Real Story included a forward by Donaldson on why he wrote it. Basically he takes a victim (Morn Hyland), a villain (Angus Thermopyle), and a hero (Nick Succorso) and reverses their roles. He makes the victim the hero, the villain the victim, and the hero the villain in a stunning saga that takes place across the vast exapnses of space in the midst of a struggle between humanity and the aliens bent on humanity's annihilation. This is one of the best science fiction stories I've read. The characters stay with me. I've never forgotten them and think about them often, even though I read this series years ago. I purchased it recently for my son, who also really liked it, but I was dismayed at the time that some of the volumes had gone out of print. I now own them all in hardback, thanks to Amazon's marketplace and Half Price Books!
Profile Image for Katie.
166 reviews42 followers
July 25, 2012
I will tell you what I don't like about this book right up front, to warn those who might wish to be warned: there's a LOT of raping and psychological abusing of the main female character. In fact, it's an essential element of the story most of the way through the book. I don't criticize the actual book for it, because it was necessary in order to tell this particular story about this particular man who was acting fully within his character to do such a thing. But it's still really unpleasant to read. If you can't stomach that sort of thing, steer clear.

Now, on to the good stuff.

The first thing I **loved** about this book was its structure. First, we are told about a very brief scene and its subsequent aftermath from the point of view (and therefore, pure opinion) of most of the casual onlookers who witnessed it. Then we dial back and are told about the exact same sequence of events from the point of view of the onlookers who were more observant, and noticed things the casual bystanders did not. They have a slightly different hypothesis about what happened because they observed differently. Then we dial back AGAIN and see the same sequence of events from what the investigating security and official staff were able to piece together afterwards, using records and personal interviews, as well as their professional intuition and experience. Again, they paint a slightly different picture than the other observers, because they have slightly different information.

Then we get the real story, from the points of view of the two - and later three - players involved. But even here, there are three different versions of the story being told, because each person has a very different perspective on what is happening. So now we know the actual events that occurred, and yet we're still left facing the idea that there is no actual conclusive true story, because each of them experienced a different version of the same events.

I. Freakin'. Love that. Yes indeedy.

The other reason I really liked this book was that Donaldson wrote a totally unlikeable main character, and succeeding in making the reader care about him. In general, people like to root for people they identify with somehow, at least in part. That's why we root for the underdog - because we all feel like life hasn't really given us our fair shake. So its rare to find a book where the protagonist is completely detestable, because what reader would desire to root for him? It's even more rare to find such a protagonist that is written so well that we actually do want him to succeed. These rare successful attempts are one of my favorite things to read.

This little novella is the first of a series, which I may or may not continue to read, but it also stands on its own as a fantastic open and shut character study. Bravo.
Profile Image for Mogsy.
2,120 reviews2,681 followers
May 12, 2012
Another recommendation from my husband, with the caveat that The Gap series can be a pretty dark and brutal read. I asked, "Dark and brutal like A Song of Ice and Fire but with spaceships?" His answer: "Actually, that's not such a bad comparison, in the horrible-things-happening-to-the-main-characters kind of way." So I picked this up knowing exactly what I was in for.

This first book, originally meant to be a standalone novella, only reads like an introduction to the three main characters. However, it's still a great story, meant to explore the classic archetypes of hero, villain and victim by presenting a scenario in the first chapter and then telling the "real" story behind it in the rest of the book. Things are not always what they seem and characters are not always who you think they are.

I look forward to reading the second book so I can start getting to the actual story and meat of this series.
Profile Image for Mark Harrison.
850 reviews21 followers
April 6, 2018
Interesting sci-fi story featuring numerous pirates and Morn, a female cop captured and implanted with a mind control device. At the mercy of the depraved Angus she is horribly brutalised - too much in my opinion. Salvation might be in the form of another pirate the mercurial Nick - but will she live that long ?? Interesting premise but the violence spoilt things.
Profile Image for Bill.
972 reviews376 followers
December 2, 2019
Apparently, this is the novel you have to "get through" before getting into the real meat of this series.

Stephen R. Donaldson has his fans, but those who aren't fans aren't for one particularly glaring reason: the rapes.
A lot of people took severe outrage on his character Thomas Covenant in his fantasy series for having his way with a woman in a world he did not believe really existed.
If I remember correctly, and this was a few decades ago, he committed rape because he believed this was all in his imagination and thus there were no moral boundaries crossed. I think.
Anyways, Donaldson took a lot of flak for that, or rather, his character did, and there was a lot of hate and outrage.
My problem with the book is that I just found it rather dull and didn't continue.

I am always on the lookout for great science fiction. A little while ago I was searching various web articles for this, and there was a write up on this series that intrigued me.
So I put it on the list and here we are.
Now, here's another thing. I wasn't planning on reading this just now. It just so happened that after lunch at work last week I had decided to DNF the book I was reading.
So that left me with nothing to read for my 50 minute commute home. Except for the sample of this novel. So I started this half-heartedly.
Once I got home, I was 20 pages into this, and being a short novel I figured I might as well buy it and keep going. It had a pretty good start. Essentially, it's the story of Angus, a space pirate, his prisoner Morn, and how Nick, a heroic space pirate, rescued Morn from Angus. This is all revealed in the first chapter, but the rest of the novel is, "the real story" behind this.

Back to the "get through" part of this. The rapes again!
Okay, our Stephen has a thing for rape, yes? There's a lot of rape here. But, it illustrates the abuse of technology and helps paint the complexity of these characters.
Whether you agree this was necessary and can "get through" these passages is up to you. I can see how this can be upsetting to a lot of people, but I see what he's doing here and there is no denying how this upped the stakes and intensity of the story.

I liked the story, I really liked the world-building and what I think I can anticipate as that grows, and I liked his style of storytelling, and the characters. Considering I enjoyed something that I hadn't really felt like starting in the first place is saying something.
I'm looking forward to the meat of the series to come.
Profile Image for Dave O.
10 reviews
March 5, 2020
Still with the rape, I see. If you love rape as much as Stephen R. Donaldson and his characters have proven to over the course of his bibliography, then you’ll love this book!

RAPE!!!

I shouldn’t have even picked this up given Donaldson’s track record, but I thought “let’s see what he does with sci-fi (and I can’t express enough how loosely I use the term sci-fi here). If not for the novel’s short length, I definitely would have stopped reading this complete piece of garbage the moment the main character/antagonist (I guess?) used the word ‘cornhole’ to describe the repeated rapings he received at the hands of his rapey roommates during his time spent at a school for troubled youth. I guess this was supposed to make us feel some sort of sympathy for him, feel sorry for him and understand the repeated rapings he himself subjects his victim to, the young woman he turns into a punching bag sex doll by implanting a chip in her brain which is operated by a remote control, turning her into an automaton at the press of a button any time he pleases.

Rape was a smashing way to start off his lacklustre Chronicles of Thomas Covenant series, however there it wasn’t something the reader had to endure repeatedly over the course of the first novel. It was also quite the experience to read of all the unwanted sexual acts performed on the poor girl in The Mirror of Her Dreams by whichever unmemorable character that was in that unremarkable novel. When you do something like rape fiction so well, it's obvious you should stick to that trail, right Stephen R. Donaldson?

I’d like to thank Stephen R. Donaldson for freeing up some space on my shelf for more, actual worthy authors and their novels. His books will be removed and placed in a box and buried somewhere deep in the basement. I’d normally donate, but I’d rather not contribute to anyone else reading his 18th tier bullshit novels, and throwing them in the trash or burning any book just doesn’t seem right.

1 star because it was an actual book written by an actual human being.

Avoid.
Profile Image for Sumant.
245 reviews8 followers
November 26, 2015
This is got to be by far the darkest book I have read this year, because there were so much stomach churning scenes in this book that it gave me a feeling of watching a psychological horror movie like Misery. Also I was a bit skeptical reading Donaldson again due to the fact that Thomas covenant's first two books were a drag for me, but Donaldson sure has turned the tide in this book and has written some compelling stuff.

Some of the strong points of the book are

1.A compact story.
2.Hard to like any character.

Let me elaborate on the above points

1.A compact story.

The story starts when a space pirate known as Angus Thermopylae arrives with a women known as Morn hyland in space bar known as Mallory's. Also she comes to attention of a womanizer pirate known as Nick Succorso. After a few days police comes to the bar and arrests Angus on charge of theft, and Morn leaves with Nick. Now the folks in the bar starts speculating on, which lead to this and all kinds of rumors start flying around, Donaldson gives us these rumors in first few chapters but the truth is not so simple.

The story is as simple and compact as that but when you get the whole picture your head starts pinning around with the brutality and violence present in it.

2.Hard to like any character.

Angus Thermopylae is got to be most disgusting character I have read in grim dark because there is no bounds which this man will go to achieve his purpose. At the start he is seen as running away from the space patrol, but his faith saves him and awards him a victim with whom he can do all sort of despicable things.

Morn hyland is living in an ideal world and has achieved her objective of becoming a police officer, but things start turning to worse for her when her patrol ship start chasing Angus for the crime he has committed.

Most of the story revolves around the above two characters we hate Angus when he starts breaking Morn on physical as well as the mental level, but Morn too has done something nasty with no fault of hers. It became really hard for me to like any of the characters although I sympathized with Morn.

This definitely is a brutal book and people having issues with normal grim dark stuff should stay away from it but if you are able to digest it then this is not ride which is to be missed. I give this book 4/5 stars.
Profile Image for Ethan.
Author 3 books68 followers
November 28, 2013
If this were a longer book, I'm not sure I would have finished it. There's an awful lot of rape and murder going on, and it's not always clear that it's serving the plot. The main character casually murders people by the dozen. In the middle of the book there are almost a dozen scenes in which the main character rapes one of the other major characters. This isn't described in excruciating detail, but it's stomach churning and probably makes this book something to avoid for anyone personally dealing with sexual violence trauma. My biggest criticism of the first Thomas Covenant book is that I couldn't bring myself to care about a protagonist who is a rapist. Indeed, one wonders whether Donaldson is capable of writing a book in which the main character isn't a rapist. But at least with The Real Story it doesn't seem that you're supposed to sympathize with the rapist (at least at first - I suspect that Angus will become more sympathetic in later books).

Despite all this, I can appreciate the quality of Donaldson's prose and his skill with character development, which is probably what prevented me from putting this down (although I seriously considered it several times). My edition contains an afterward in which Donaldson explains some of his ideas behind the series, some of which honestly sound pretty cool. I'm particularly intrigued by the aliens as well as figuring out what's going on with Morn and Nick. Nonetheless, I'm still not sure if I'll pick up the sequels. It will depend how I feel about this one after I've had time to digest it.
Profile Image for Kevin Brady.
11 reviews1 follower
Read
September 8, 2013
I like my fiction DARK.

There is no character in this series that isn't deeply, perhaps even fatally flawed. Donaldson is a master storyteller, well loved for his Thomas Covenant series. His science fiction is tighter paced, first-person viewpoints similar to Game of Thrones novels.

This story has it all for a hard-core science fiction lover. High tech, deep space, aliens that are distinctive and not humanoids, with very different motivations from ours. Blaster wars, derelict space-craft, pirates, politics... deep looks at the implications of implants that can control our emotions and other glands.

Not for the faint of heart. Rape, child abuse themes are present.

The character's flaws bind them together, and impose requirements for them to behave the way that they do. Ethics is the primary subject matter, and even the worst villain can be understood.

Hats off to Donaldson. I read every book in this series, and wish he'd do some more science fiction.

This series, IMO, shouldn't be missed.
Profile Image for Joy.
1,408 reviews20 followers
October 27, 2021
Two men and one woman form a triangle composed of villain, victim and savior. But which person is which?

THE REAL STORY is the small-seed beginning of The Gap, one of the most hard-hitting sci fi series I've read. Powerful character archetypes find themselves on various sides of an ethical free-for-all. What can be justified when the goal is to keep humanity from being mutated into the enemy species?

I called it a series, but actually it's a 5-part novel, each book opening onto wider horizons than the previous book. The emotional experience of each character makes them all seem larger than life.

Read 8 times. The Gap series is my favorite sci fi read of 2014.
Profile Image for Dr. Barrett  Dylan Brown, Phd.
231 reviews29 followers
August 29, 2008
I found this on the street and thought it was a science fiction book... halfway through I decided I had stumbled into a perverse romance novel, than towards the end I thought it was sci-fi... now I'm not quite sure. It's not exactly romantic with all the rape and sexual torture so explicity described, but, well, I don't know. I liked it, but felt kinda dirty afterwards and I don't quite feel like reading the next book in the series. I'm kinda scared to be honest.
56 reviews
October 22, 2013
Competent hard sci-fi, if not anything particularly novel or revolutionary (for the modern reader anyway, it may have been more pioneering in its time) in which various unscrupulous quasi-pirates feud over pride, money and a spectacularly beautiful marooned space-cop. The writing is tense and workmanlike and the sense of one-step-from-disaster spaceflight imperatives well evoked, but the framing device of the whole book fell a little flat to me, a bit in love with its own cleverness. But the elephant in the room is the continual nauseating aura of rape and sexual violence that hangs over the whole thing. I can't argue that it isn't in place with the world Donaldson has created - in fact, I'd argue instead that the world-building was largely aimed at making this environment plausible. But the emphasis is wearisome and creepy. I've been avoiding reading the Gap for more than 20 years because this aspect of Thomas Covenant put me off so much, and to open up another Donaldson book after all that time and be greeted by this rape-a-palooza was just incredibly disheartening. It's very very hard not to start judging the author, and I'm not 100% sure I'm succeeding on that count. Maybe it's bad form to let your experience with another of the author's books taint your judgement of this one, but dammit, reading is a subjective activity and it's all about how books make you *feel*. And this book made me feel like I didn't want to read it, or any other Donaldson books, ever again.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Charles.
539 reviews94 followers
September 27, 2017
A rather old-fashioned book that is meant to be a character study wrapped in a space opera.

Writing was unexceptional. The bondage/slavery angle was icky.

There only was one character, despite it being a psychological threesome.

The space opera was almost American western inspired. Tech involved a lot of hand waving and was unoriginal.

The twist at the end was just impossible, given everything you'd learned about the main character. Mercifully this story was very short.

I won't be reading the next in the series The Gap Into Vision: Forbidden Knowledge.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews11.6k followers
December 31, 2009
3.5 stars. Beginning volume of the very dark and gritty Gap Series. Excellent character study and hints of some very nice world-building. I will certainly read the next volume in the series though this book, on its own, was not spectacular.
Profile Image for Zade.
341 reviews37 followers
March 9, 2014
Donaldson can write like nobody's business and this excursion into space opera is no exception. It is fast-paced and intricately plotted. There are a few reasons, however, that I cannot give it five stars. First of all, the level of violence, particularly sexual violence, is off the charts. It's excruciating to read and there are scenes you wish you could scrub from your brain. This violence is not gratuitous--it is key to understanding the actions and thinking of the characters, but it is definitely disturbing and not at all for the sensitive. To his credit, Donaldson forces the reader to face the uncomfortable fact that human monsters are created, not born. The most despicable character in the book is also the saddest. Donaldson makes sure the reader can never settle comfortably into a bad guys vs. good guys mindset.

The second detractor of this book may actually be a plus for some readers. The book, hardly more than a novella, is merely the prelude for a much longer series of books. As tempting as it might be to skip this small introduction, you really must read it if you hope to understand what is happening in the second novel. Furthermore, in order to get the whole story, you must read all five books of the Gap Cycle. Each novel ends without any kind of resolution to the problems developed therein.

Having covered the negatives, let me make clear that Donaldson is a first-class world builder. Although his style is nothing like Herbert's, he has created a universe that is arguably as complex as that of the first three Dune novels. These books are easily fascinating enough to make you read each book in one (long) sitting, but if you do that, you'll have to go back and read them again because there's so much there.

I first read these books in the 1990s, when the last couple in the series first came out. They've stuck with me at least 20 years, in ways both positive and disturbing. I am rereading them now in anticipation of posting them on paperbackswap.

I rate books by whether or not I'm willing to give them space on my limited shelves. In terms of quality, the Gap Cycle merits a place. I won't be keeping my copies, though, because I don't want to risk my children picking them up.
Profile Image for Johnny.
Author 10 books130 followers
October 5, 2009
Not having picked up a Donaldson book since the second trilogy of Thomas Covenant, I was surprised to rediscover just how much I savor this author's prose. Reading his books is tantamount to Hannibal Lector adorning his meal with fava beans. I really feel like I get into the character's heads.

This book is essentially a science-fiction homage to Wagner's Ring Cycle, but it is considerably more than that. It deals with a cataclysmic love triangle, but it is considerably more than a soap opera or that sophisticated English antecedent to the soap genre, Jane Austen. It is a mystery of a sort, but it is much more than that. It is a story where you quickly know what happens, but why and exactly how it happens unfolds like certain flower blossoms at dawn.

A space pirate takes a hostage. The hostage is drop-dead gorgeous. The space pirate perceives something of the Stockholm Syndrome taking place in his victim and this feeling of power mixed with false signals of love creates emotions he's never felt before.

A space rogue creates an elaborate plan to rescue the hostage. But before we start to accept him as Hans Solo the lovable space rogue, we discover that he has issues, as well. We find that there are byzantine layers of conflicting emotions and desires in this character's psyche, as well.

And, of course, we delve into the motivation of the victim, as well. What is her motive for almost simultaneously betraying one of the members of this triangle and helping the same member of the triangle. Is it guilt? Is it love? Donaldson unveils the answer in a riveting story that has me wanting to get my hands on the next volume fairly soon.

If you're looking for "wild magic," this series isn't for you. If you're looking for textured psychological action in a science-fiction universe, it just might be the book you've been waiting for.
Profile Image for Mark Tallen.
216 reviews12 followers
December 12, 2018
I enjoyed this story and the book is well written. Yes, it has disturbing themes and violence throughout but its only a work of fiction. Our real world is much more disturbing and violent, just put the news on TV for the confirmation. The author showed courage to write the book and we see deeply into the dark recesses of a particular character's dark and troubled mind. I say courage because I'm sure he got slammed by some people and I think that is unfair because stated earlier, it's only a work of fiction. I'm not saying the dark scenes were pleasant to read but I don't want books that are censored or heavily edited by nervous editors and publishers, I want books that are true to the authors vision and with not always with sugar coated themes and prose. Besides that however, if a reader wants to, they can skim read, or blank out text if desired or even stop reading the book altogether. I wasn't forced to read the book and I do plan to read book 2 eventually. Do I recommend the book?, well yes for sure, but be advised that it is a dark scifi journey.
Profile Image for Shari.
255 reviews27 followers
June 22, 2012
This is my first Donaldson book to read. I finished it in just a few days, and it wasn't because it was short, but because there was something about Donaldson's narrative style that made me going. The story is pretty simple, told by a narrator who doesn't leave much room for the reader to judge, who gives little description to the setting, the era, and what humankind has achieved and reached thus far, and who concentrates only on what the "real story" is. And yet, the story was captivating. There certainly are brutal parts, but they are in keeping with characterization and Donaldson gives a general description rather than a detailed, blow-by-blow account. What really pulled me into the story was its pathos. Donaldson gives a physical and psychological study of greed, lust, and guilt in Morn, Angus and Nick. Science, even though well presented here, is second only to the interplay of human emotions. I'm eager to read the next book of the series.
Profile Image for Ezri K.
266 reviews3 followers
March 4, 2020
Book was too full of rape, abuse, and narcissistic demented characters with the treatment and veiw of females as things to be own and controlled.
Profile Image for Blaise.
383 reviews98 followers
January 21, 2024
I was fortunate enough to meet author Stephen Donaldson in person at the ICFA convention last year and I was eager to read one of his works very soon. The convention had a massive collection of older and newer novels and The Real Story was the first book I grabbed. Stephen was gracious enough to sign my copy and I have been waiting for a good time to dive into this well known sci-fi series but I was not prepared. I love reading dark fiction in all formats, but fans on Donaldson know how he can turn a story down a path of no return while still having you invested in the characters with the choices they make whether good or bad. Although a short book it offers space pirates, sickness that arise from space travel known as Gap sickness, mind control, kidnapping, murder and that’s just in the first few chapters. I haver never read a story like this one so brace yourself.

Angus Thermopyle was an ore pilot, a murderer and every pilot knows to stay the hell out of his way. When Angus shows up at Mallorys Bar with a gorgeous woman at his side the other patrons take notice as she is a sight to behold. Morn Hyland became the talk of the bar and the Delta sector until Nick Succorso enters the scene and intends to win Morn’s affections. Nick and Angus appear to be on a collision course of rivalry and revenge with Morn being the prize but the battle is over sooner than it begins. Angus is arrested and charged with high crimes while Nick and Morn escape the vicious pirate, but sadly that is not the real story. The tale that unfolds is so dark, haunting, and horrifying that it was hard to finish. Donaldson doesn’t write dark scenes for the sake of shocking the reader and it all has an ultimately purpose even if it is not all revealed in this first book. Trust the author to deliver on his vision and the story will tell itself.

The Real Story was originally written in 1991 and it was intended to be a standalone novella as opposed to a five book series. Due to popularity or another contract from the publisher, the series was expanded but this book can absolutely be read on its own. The tale surrounding Angus, Morn, and Nicks beginnings will stay with you for some time and this type of sci-fi story I can absorb to the fullest. There isn’t a lot of detail regarding the science and technology of the world which tends to take me out of a sci-fi story and I appreciate this approach by Donaldson. At less than 200 pages, the book can be read easily in a weekend or in one day for the more ambitious fan.

Although The Real Story is not the first Stephen Donaldson book I have read, it is the most thought provoking and jarring. Its hard for me to find a sci-fi story that grabs me from the first page but also doesn’t loose me with the technology aspect. There is a reason Donaldson is held in such high regard around the writing community and I can see why. Not everyone will like this book but you will agree it is not like anything you have ever read.

Cheers!
Profile Image for Seon Ji (Dawn).
1,038 reviews245 followers
July 26, 2023
OK. I prepared myself for this one because of all the negative reviews regarding the content.

I am a die hard Donaldson fan so I decided to go ahead and see what it is all about.

So far, none of the MC's are likeable. Angus, a space pirate, is brutal. He rapes and beats Morn constantly throughout the book. Plus he has an implant put into her so he can control her with a remote control.
Morn, is a cop, young and beautiful, but made helpless in the entire story. She is pretty much useless.
Nick, also a space pirate, is handsome, a rake but has serious issues as well. He wants Morn and devises a way to rescue her.

Reading the AFTERWORD by Donaldson, helped me understand him better, as an artist, a writer, and a human being. It also explained his writing motives and inspirations. I love this author even more now. But I always felt he was doing alot of inner work on himself, even before reading this book. His mind is brilliant as well as his writing.

Anyway, in the AFTERWORD he says, in short, he was taking a Victim -Morn, a Villian - Angus, and a rescuer - Nick and evolving them to change places. Morn a rescuer (of Angus), Nick becomes the villian and Angus the victim.

I look forward to seeing how he accomplishes this.

Content concerns: Not for the sensitive reader. Rape, abuse, violence, alcohol, drugs. There is sexual attraction and a mention of love but this is NOT A ROMANCE. Keep yourself distant from the characters when reading if you are sensitive. All of them are pretty messed up.
Profile Image for Aventinus.
56 reviews15 followers
February 17, 2017
★ = Abysmal

(Disclaimer: Δεν τελείωσα το βιβλίο, το σταμάτησα στο 35%)

Ξεκίνησα να διαβάζω το The Gap Into Conflict: The Real Story στο αεροπλάνο για την Ελλάδα για τρεις λόγους:

1. Σύμφωνα με τις κριτικές είναι ένα πολύ βίαιο βιβλίο (yay for violence)
2. O S. R. Donaldson - σύμφωνα με αυτά που είχα διαβάσει - μοιάζει στον S. Erikson τον οποίο λατρεύω
3. Ήθελα να διαβάσω ένα gritty, dark SF βιβλίο

Συμφωνα με αυτά που διάβασα, το συγκεκριμένο βιβλίο είναι ανελέτηα gritty και σκοτεινό. Κάποιοι ανέφεραν πως περιέχει επανελημένα βιασμούς και άλλα "ωραία" πραγματάκια, εμπεριέχει σκοτεινούς χαρακτήρες που δεν ανήκουν στην κλασική νόρμα "Είμαι ήρωας, θα σώσω τον γαλαξία" και αρκετές ανατροπές. Ωραία λέω, καλή φάση.

Το πρώτο πράγμα που μου έκανε αρνητική εντύπωση είναι γεγονός ότι το βιβλίο είναι πολύ κακογραμμένο. Από την πρώτη παράγραφο ένιωθα σα να διαβάζω μία κακή μετάφραση. Η πρόζα είναι απαράδεκτη σε σημείο που νόμιζα ότι διάβαζα το κείμενο ενός 14χρονου wannabe συγγραφέα.

Το δεύτερο πράγμα που με ενόχλησε ήταν το γεγονός ο κόσμος που περιγράφει ο συγγραφέας είναι άψυχος. Διαβάζουμε ένα lore (τι είναι το Gap, τι επιπτώσεις έχει, πως είναι το DeltaSec κτλ) το οποίο δε με ενθουσίασε καθόλου - και πιστέψτε με, είμαι sucker για το οποιοδήποτε lore. Tίποτα από αυτά που διάβασα δεν μου κίνησε το ενδιαφέρον και για τίποτα από αυτά δεν θέλησα να μάθω περισσότερα.

Το τρίτο σημείο που με ενόχλησε και εκεί ήταν που αποφάσισα ότι δεν έχει νόημα να συνεχίσω ήταν - και δεν πιστεύω ότι το λέω αυτό - οι σκηνές βίας. Γενικά, είμαι fan της ανελέητης βίας σε βιβλία και ταινίες, από gore μέχρι σεξουαλική βία. Η διαφορά είναι πως σε ένα καλό βιβλίο ή μία καλή ταινία, μία καλή σκηνή βίας σε σοκάρει ή σε ενθουσιάζει ή την βρίσκεις hot ή γελάς ή σε ψυχοπλακώνει γιατί ο συγγραφέας σου δείχνει την ωμή πραγματικότητα, αλλά σε κάθε περίπτωση διαβάζεις κάτι που είτε σου αρέσει είτε ξέρεις ότι εξυπηρετεί κάπως την πλοκή. Οι σκηνές βίας στο The Gap ήταν... Cringy. Πολύ cringy. Δεν ήταν σοκαριστικές. Δεν ήταν hot. Δεν ήταν αστείες. Δεν ήταν ψυχοπλακωτικές. Ήταν fucking cringy.

Επιπλεον, οι πρωταγωνιστές ήταν οι πιο unlikable χαρακτήρες που έχω διαβάσει σε βιβλίο και όχι με την καλή έννοια. Τις περισσότερες φορές θέλεις να υπάρχει τουλάχιστον ένας χαρακτήρας που αγαπάς να μισείς. Τα περισσότερα πετυχήμενα βιβλία έχουν τέτοιους χαρακτήρες. Τα πολύ πετυχημένα βιβλία έχουν πρωταγωνιστές για τους οποίους οι αναγνώστες είναι διχασμένοι (κάποιοι τους λατρεύουν, άλλοι τους μισούν). Δυστυχώς οι χαρακτήρες του The Gap δεν ανήκουν σε αυτή την κατηγορία. Είναι όλοι 100% unlikable. Απλά δεν θέλεις να διαβάζεις για αυτούς. Δεν έχουν κανένα ενδιαφέρον, κανένα σημείο για να ταυτιστείς, δεν έχουν τίποτα για να πιαστείς. Δεν θέλεις καν να τους μισήσεις. Απλά αδιαφορείς. Ο Donaldson κατάφερε να φτιάξει μία πρωταγωνίστρια η οποία είναι θύμα βιασμού και γενικότερου abuse και παρόλα αυτά σε ενοχλεί ο χαρακτήρας της με τον ίδιο τρόπο που σε ενοχλεί ο χαρακτήρας του βιαστή της. Υποθέτω ότι πρέπει να έχεις ιδιαίτερο συγγραφικό "ταλέντο" για να καταφέρεις κάτι τέτοιο.

Δε νομίζω ότι θα προσπαθήσω να διαβάσω ξανά βιβλίο του Donaldson για να είμαι ειλικρινής. Υπάρχουν τόσα βιβλία εκεί έξω.
4 reviews4 followers
April 13, 2020
If it was possible to give a book 0 stars, I would do so for ‘The Gap Into Conflict: The Real Story’.

The title promises a ‘real’ story, but there are no real revelations. The ‘real’ story is exactly what can be assumed after reading the first chapter - Angus Thermopyle has abducted and abused a female captive. There’s no eye-opening explanation as to why he has done this, other than the fact that he’s a horrifying, pathetic man.

This feels like torture porn of the most degrading variety. Are we supposed to be intrigued by Angus? Curious enough to read the next in the series? No, thank you.

This is the sort of book that a fedora-wearing, gaslighting bro would enjoy.

If you can’t already tell, I passionately detested this novel. The world could do with less ‘man repeatedly rapes woman but please do keep reading to see if he redeems himself by the way it’s not a space opera, it’s sci-fi genius, all my friends say so’.
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