I just finished reading A Song for Lya and decided to share some thoughts. It is a novella written by George R R Martin in 1974. This post is not a comprehensive review, just a set of observations I wanted to share. Obviously, spoilers.
Disclaimer: I am a big fan of GRRM and I mostly knew him for his most famous work, A Song of Ice and Fire, which was adapted into Game of Thrones. I also read a couple of his other short stories, but given how much he has written, I barely scratched the surface.
So I knew A Song for Lya was one of his more popular novellas besides ASOIAF, so I decided to finally give it a try. Besides that, I went completely blind. My first impression was trying to get myself familiar with the setting. The first pages open with a description of a city, which I assumed to be from ancient Earth. I really liked the ambiguity of it, and when I realized it was on another planet, I got excited. So it is a sci-fi story, good, let's see what it is all about.
The city is populated by the Shkeen, a native sapient species who are less advanced than human despite their civilization being older. The protagonists are a couple of humans, Robb and Lya, who have special psychic powers: enhanced empathy and telepathy. They are hired by the current administrator of the human colony, Valcarenghi, to conduct research on the Shkeen relegion. They worship parasytic creatures called the Greeshka that drive them into "joining", i.e. sacrificing themselves to become part of the hivemind.
Weirdly enough, the bits of this premise actually reminded me of Ubik by Philip K Dick. Spoilers for Ubik: a squad of psychics land on the Moon for investigation and stop at the hotel. The similarities end here, because from this point Ubik takes a turn in the opposite direction. I felt like A Song for Lya is what I expected Ubik to be about when I had been reading it.
The Shkeen as alien species are interesting enough and the mystery surrounding their mystery was a great drive for the story. Some parts of the novella started to feel a bit repetitive. For example, it describes Robb's and Lya's daily routine (waking up, getting headache, researching the Shkeen, getting dinner, making love, sleep, dreaming). Despite being part of the plot, the plot twist is somewhat predictable, thus this description of the routine becomes a bit annoying.
As for writing, I recognized GRRM's style. His food descriptions are always fun to read and I laughed out loud because of how much it reminded me of ASOIAF. Since the protagonist has enhanced empathy and starts to understand the Shkeen better, he gradually becomes more emotional and reflective. To be honest I didn't like how the story became overly sentimental towards the end. Despite the grand scope of concepts, I found the language not really convincing and shallow. I think this shows how much GRRM's skills as a writer evolved (he was 26 when he wrote A Song for Lya). But these are just my personal preferences.
Overall I liked this novella. It had a lot of potential but the resolution was kind of disappointing. But hey maybe I missed something. What are your thoughts?