In hopes of establishing a permanent monastery, Seamus O'Neill and his crewmates land on the planet Zylong, but their long pilgrimage has worn their ship, the Iona, and Zylong may be their last stop
Andrew Greeley was a Roman Catholic priest, sociologist, journalist, and author of 50 best-selling novels and more than 100 works of nonfiction. For decades, Greeley entertained readers with such popular characters as the mystery-solving priest Blackie Ryan and the fey, amateur sleuth Nuala Anne McGrail. His books typically center on Irish-American Roman Catholics living or working in Chicago.
I barely gave this one three stars, and I am a notoriously liberal rater and an inveterate lover of science fiction. I thought at first that this was a terrible book, but I had to revise my thinking somewhat. Upon reflection I decided it fits into a sub-genre you might call "Religious SF", and I mean it as sincere, Christian proselytizing SF, and not something like the wonderful A Canticle for Leibowitz. This book is written from the standpoint of a Catholic missionary in a sense, and carries that flavor through to the end. Yes, it has some ham-fisted sexual descriptions (well, the author is after all a priest) but even then the hero "marries" the girl in his heart since there is no one around to officiate their union.
I look at it as in the same category as, say, Christian romance, or Christian western, and with that proviso, I have to judge it a little more leniently.
A great novel about a religious order, St. Brigid, who are travelers and sometimes missionaries. Having traveled for centuries on their current vessel, they find they're in trouble. They have to find a planet to settle on but be asked to first. A messenger is sent ahead and gets involved with the struggle for freedom on the planet. He falls in love with a girl already betrothed to another. It then turns into an adventure about the overthrow of the oppressive government.
A little uneven, but it's one of his first books so that's not surprising. You can see the threads of characters that he develops more fully in his later books, as he sticks pretty close to type. I love his books, they gave me a new outlook on religion in general and Catholicism in particular. I'm really going to miss Andrew Greeley as an author.