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Footsteps in the Sky Kindle Edition

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 90 ratings

The pueblo people who landed on the Fifth World found it Earthlike, empty, and ready for colonization . . . but a century later, they are about to meet the planet’s owners

One hundred years ago, Sand’s ancestors made the long, one-way trip to the Fifth World, ready to work ceaselessly to terraform the planet. Descendants of native peoples like the Hopi and Zuni, they wanted to return to the way of life of their forebears, who honored the Kachina spirits.

Now, though, many of the planet’s inhabitants have begun to resent their grandparents’ decision to strand them in this harsh and forbidding place, and some have turned away from the customs of the Well-Behaved People. Sand has her doubts, but she longs to believe that the Kachina live on beyond the stars and have been readying a new domain for her people.

She may be right. Humans have discovered nine habitable worlds, all with life that shares a genetic code entirely alien to any on Earth. Someone has been seeding planets, bringing life to them. But no other sign of the ancient farmers has ever been discovered—until one day they return to the Fifth World. They do not like what they find.

Originally written in 1994,
Footsteps in the Sky is finally being released in digital form by Open Road Media.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“An intriguing combination of space opera, science, culture, nature, Hopi traditions and aliens . . . [with] an emotionally engaging dimension that is often lacking from hard science fiction novels.” —Risingshadow

“A unique welding of an ancient human culture and an even more ancient nonhuman one into a highly original and fascinating future.
” —Stanley Schmidt
 

About the Author


Greg Keyes was born in 1963 in Meridian, Mississippi. When his father took a job on the Navajo reservation in Arizona, Keyes was exposed at an early age to the cultures and stories of the Native Southwest, which would continue to influence him for years to come. He earned a bachelor’s degree in anthropology from Mississippi State University and a master’s degree from the University of Georgia. While pursuing a PhD at UGA, he wrote several novels, including
The Waterborn and its sequel, The Blackgod. He followed these with the Age of Unreason books, the epic fantasy series Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone, and tie-in novels for numerous franchises, including Star Wars, Babylon 5, the Elder Scrolls, and Planet of the Apes. Keyes lives and works in Savannah, Georgia, with his wife, Nell; son, Archer; and daughter, Nellah.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00Q5UWNI6
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open Road Media Sci-Fi & Fantasy (May 26, 2015)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 26, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2715 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 300 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 90 ratings

About the author

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Greg Keyes
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Greg Keyes was born in Meridian Mississippi on April 11th, 1963. His mother read to him early and often, until he learned to read. After that he read a lot, between exploring the forests of his native state and the red-rock cliffs of the Navajo Nation where his father worked for a time, Greg took advantage of public libraries and bookmobiles to keep himself entertained, reading science fiction and fact, folktales, and mythology. To his delight, he discovered that writing books was actually a job, and so he decided he should do that. He began to write tales of dinosaurs, spaceships, and fantastic inventions. He listened to the oral traditions of his family, to the stories told in the Navajo Nation -- and more than ever, to read and adventure in the physical world around him. He went to college, earned degrees in anthropology, worked as an archaeologist, travelled, played strange, violent games, learned to play music, worked as a night guard, ironed newspapers, associated with interesting people. In 1996 he managed to get the job he had been working toward when his first novel, THE WATERBORN, was published.

Since that time Greg has published over thirty books, including the original series CHILDREN OF THE CHANGELING, THE AGE OF UNREASON, and THE KINGDOMS OF THORN AND BONE, as well as the stand-alone books THE HOUNDS OF ASH and FOOTSTEPS IN THE SKY He has also had the great fortune to be asked to contribute to other universes, writing books for BABYLON 5, STAR WARS, PLANET OF THE APES, PACIFIC RIM, THE ELDER SCROLLS, XCOM, INDEPENDENCE DAY and Marvel's AVENGERS, and to novelize the films INTERSTELLAR, GODZILLA KING OF THE MONSTERS and GODZILLA vs KONG. He recently scripted her first graphic novel, GODZILLA Vs. KONG: DOMINION He is currently finishing the third book in his newest trilogy, THE HIGH AND FARAWAY. He lives, writes, fences and cooks in Savannah, Georgia with his wife Nell, son John (formerly known as Archer), daughter Lilith (formerly known as Nellah), and a small pack of dogs.

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
90 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2022
Footsteps in the Sky is an exploration of what might happen if two different civilizations from two very different worlds set out to terraform (or their version of terraforming) the same planet at the same time. It was a little difficult to get into at first but came together into an excellent tale.

The story is inspired by a Hopi origin legend (included at the beginning of the book) about a group of people living in a place that had become unpleasant who, hearing what they thought were footsteps in the sky, sent a clay bird up to investigate. The bird found a grey featureless land full of fires burning inhabited by a single strange person. He asked if the people below can come up to live with this person. The person told him that if the people from below were willing to work very hard to live in that land and make it different, they could come.

The planet where the current story takes place is never named. It is very far away, and initially not at all hospitable for human habitation. Apparently, when the humans first arrived, the atmosphere contained a lot of alcohol.

The people who chose to come there for the terraforming work were descendants of the Hopi tribe from earth. They undertook the difficult task of working to transform the planet into a livable place in the hope that they would be allowed to live there on their own terms in peace.

It begins to look as if that dream will be shattered.

Unbeknownst to the people from Earth, ships from another planet had been working to terraform the planet to match conditions on their home planet since long before humans discovered the place. The alcohol atmosphere was a requirement of life for the beings who created the huge intelligent terraforming spaceships. When they see them appearing in the night sky, the Hopi of the planet call them the Kachina.

And a third group enters the equation some years into the story; a small crew from the company that sent the first humans to transform the planet.

There is enough political tension between the traditional Hopi in the farming areas and their more modern and technologically savvy relatives in the cities by the coast without any interference from the other two potentially deadly groups of arrivals.

After the Kachina ships sent down an exploratory being supposed to be like their Makers, and it died, they send a probe to investigate the people infesting their planet farm. One of the natives, a woman by the name of Pela, comes too close to the probe, and it opens and takes a sample of her, returning the sample to the Kachina ships.

Still more years later, when Pela dies, the Kachina ship sends another exploratory being who seems to be a clone of Pela, infused with the confused consciousness of the ship. This artificial Pela meets up with her still-grieving daughter, SandGreyGirl, and they have a number of adventures together. At first, Sand resents the artificial Pela, but as it begins to learn to talk and they come to understand each other, Sand realizes that it isn’t really her mother after all. When she gives it a new name, that helps. Together, they set about sorting out the conflict between all the competing interests on the planet, although that is not their conscious intention.
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2015
The intriguing thing about this novel is that it places some Hopi/Pueblo lore at the center of a space drama, utilizing the tropes of invaders vs. colonists, advanced science vs. magical powers, tradition, politics, ethics, opposing and complementary worldviews, and first contact to draw the obvious parallels. And turns expectations upside down and crossways.

It was beautiful, violent, and strange, just like my native Southwest. Keyes is respectful of native traditions as he explores love and honor in the cosmos. I have read and enjoyed Keyes' fantasy novels and am happy to report he can handle science fiction also. Particularly recommended for those who enjoy scifi with a Native American twist, or the works of Dan Simmons and Greg Bear (this is short, though).

Though I received an EARC for review from the publisher and Netgalley, I ordered a copy for my "real" bookshelves.
7 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2017
I rate this between a three and four. I am still trying to figure out what I think of this story. It has some very interesting elements, most notably the Navajo background. It is set in the future on another planet with a mystery surrounding the main character. It is well written and stands alone as a complete story and I think I will read it again the future.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2019
Keyes' writing skill and love of Native American culture shows through in this sci fi tale of a Hopi community which has colonized a planet, only to have the AI-governed planet farming ships created by original alien owners return, most displeased.

The plot is fairly basic, but readers will quickly fall in love with the characters and be fascinated with the application of Hopi mythology in a sci fi setting. The title, Footsteps in the Sky, reflect the Hopi belief that the Well-Behaved People climbed from one underworld to a higher world and a still higher one before arriving on the surface. What is more natural than that they would seek to go into space and colonize a planet to make their home?

There is the conflict of new generations who wish to live in a technical society and resent the traditionalists, the corporation that dispatched the colonists to perform the terraforming and who intend to remain in control, and the alien ships that are apt to do anything.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2015
Excellent and imaginative! Great story! Lots of thought went into this plot as well as understanding cultural aspects of the Hopi people and their ethos.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2015
I really wish I had liked this more. The blurb was interesting as I'm fond of that "first contact" trope. Unfortunately, this book could have been placed anywhere here on Earth where a down-trodden people are used by a large corporation after being offered pie in the sky promises. The writing was choppy and the editing was spotty. Change of POV was offered with no break in the formatting which made it hard to understand who was actually speaking. This cover was odd, too. The people are PEOPLE, not giant mouse people, which is what this cover conveys. AND the aliens don't look anything like this cover, either.

For those who appreciate trigger warnings, at one point there is a sex scene that, while both parties want it at the moment, they only want it because of the drugs they inhaled. Drugs that were forced on them. Some readers were offended by that. There is also a f/f love scenario. It wasn't graphic, but that might bug some people. Didn't bother me.

I've read lots of reviews for this book (and the author's other books) and people love his writing. Apparently this book wasn't written for this reader. It was all I could do to make myself finish it. This one gets a 1.5 bookmark rating from me. Read some of the other five star reviews to balance it out, you might like this one.

*Thank you, Open Road Media and NetGalley, for the opportunity to read this book.
6 people found this helpful
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