Sergei Lukyanenko bibliography


This is the bibliography of Sergei Lukyanenko.

Sergey Lukyanenko ., et al. (1990), [Knights of Forty Islands]

The story is about several contemporary teenagers "copied" into an artificial environment, where they are forced to play a game with very harsh rules.
The action is set on a set of small sand islands, which are interconnected by narrow bridges, and all the world is under a giant dome, similar to the one from "The Truman show". Inhabitants of each island try to conquer their neighbors. The mission is difficult primarily due to the fact that forces on each island are roughly equal in ability. Once one group takes over its neighbor island, it bears human losses and becomes vulnerable for an attack from a third side. The goal of the game is to take over all 40 islands, which is practically impossible to achieve. However, if they do so, the winning group will be sent back home. All children die at the age of 18, if they are not killed before. They use only cold weapons. A person who breaks the rules of the game usually accidentally dies or is killed shortly after such violation. The people also believe that they are part of some experiment, run by aliens, but have no idea where they are and what the goals of the experiment are.
The novel, harsh and romantic, mixes various genres, such as "sword and planet", "simulated reality" and "children violence".

Sergey Lukyanenko ., et al. (1990), [Nuclear Dream]

[Island Russia]

Trilogy, co-authored with Juliy Burkin.
Two brothers stumble upon a time machine hidden in an artifact dating back to Ancient Egypt. They find themselves in the future, where a Sphinx named Shidla helps them escape and goes with them on an adventure spanning thousands of years of history.
The first novel was adapted into a film called Asiris Nuna. The name comes from the supposed Ancient Egyptian phrase meaning "good night." The phrase is never mentioned in the book.
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A Lord from Planet Earth

Trilogy
An action-filled space opera with evolving characters. Each subsequent book involves more ethical problems and philosophy, while at the same time the scale of action steadily increases. This is Lukianenko's only major work that is partially set in the same imaginary universe as the "Road to Wellesberg" series of short stories.
In the novella "A princess is worth dying for", we follow Serge, a young retired sergeant of the Army of the country that now ceased to exist, who accidentally met and loved a Princess. After five years she calls him for help. Serge agrees at once to join her at another planet, Turr. The book is full of fighting with curious weapons, and galactic laws. Serge is not a weak character, and he knows the price of life — but not his enemies'... The thread going through this book is what love is worth, and what can't be allowed even for the sake of love.
With the main Enemy eliminated, why can't Serge just live with the Princess?
The ancient vanished civilization, the "Seeders", left a Temple at each inhabited planet. A Temple is both a keeper of galactic customs, and a beacon for flights in hyperspace – a selection of four beacons defines a destination in 3D space. The Earth is the only planet without a Temple, and no known combination of beacons leading to it. The people of Turr will not accept a Prince from a non-existent planet; and besides that, the Princess doesn't love Serge...
The second book is devoted to efforts of Serge and his friends to find the Earth. It involves well-thought and credible starship battles, etc. Surprisingly, Serge finds a boy from Earth. This, and some other accidents, convince Serge's crew that they have an unknown enemy. A sect called "The Descendants of Seeders" also wants to find "the planet which doesn't exist," to explode a quark bomb on it, thinking that only this will bring the Seeders back and make the universe wonderful. Who will reach the Earth first? It becomes a race for survival.
The action in the final book approaches the level of total war between two interstellar civilizations with incompatible basic values — and our friends are forced to be between the upper and the nether millstone. Despite harsh action, the style is somehow intrinsically poetic, even metaphoric — Serge will have to deal with a different culture whose values are based on beauty.
Death can seem beautiful, we see charm in destruction... but what lies beneath it all? Aren't pain and fright the real basis of all wars? Aren't all beautiful words justifying wars only the way that we, people, devised to reconcile our consciences with killing?
What is the meaning of life, what is the sense of living? Everybody finds it in his own way, but the large ancient civilization of Fungs found it in beauty. They have a single word for "truth", "beauty", and "faith". They gave up wars long ago. Any Fung that killed another died, realizing the unbeauty of his act. But human culture has taught them otherwise...
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[The Boy and the Darkness]

available online.

[Line of Delirium]

Trilogy
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[Autumn Visits]

Co-authored with Nick Perumov.
Description

Labyrinth">Labyrinth of Reflections">Labyrinth

Trilogy
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The [Stars Are Cold Toys — Star Shadow">The Stars Are Cold Toys">The [Stars Are Cold Toys — Star Shadow]

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World of Watches

Hexalogy

Night Watch">Night Watch (Russian novel)">Night Watch (aka, "The Night Watch Series"")

Co-authored with Vladimir Vasilyev.

The New Watch">New Watch (novel)">The New Watch

The Sixth Watch

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Genome">Genome (novel)">Genome

Trilogy
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Seekers of the Sky

Duology
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Rough Draft">Rough Draft (novel)">Rough Draft

Spectrum">Spectrum (Russian novel)">Spectrum

Description

Short Story Collections

H is for Human

[Nuclear Dream]

Gadget

Unpublished and early works