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In (possibly) the late '70s or the early '80s I read the first chapter of a book in a store. It was in English. I meant to go back and buy it and forgot. All I remember is this

It opens with a human, I think an officer in an army, reflecting on the death of his boss/king/lord who is physically a very large alien. He meets another officer, a friend, who has decided not to outlive the boss, but to kill himself, and he accepts this without demur. The friend guides the first person to a place where he can access a space craft, and leave the planet, and does not expect him to join in the suicide. I don't remember any of the names of the characters, nor of the alien. There is, I think, a suggestion of some kind of psychic bond between the alien and the humans.

That's all I remember. No idea why it came back into my head recently, but it did.

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    This is similar to Dread Empire's Fall, WJW's first book of The Praxis, with Martinez outliving the death of the last Shaa while his CO commits suicide, except the book dates from 2002, which is far too late...
    – DavidW
    Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 20:04
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    @DavidW - that was exactly my thought, too; though there's no way Praxis is almost 20 years old. checks copyright. Well, I feel old now....
    – andrewsi
    Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 20:08
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    @DavidW You should post an answer.
    – Spencer
    Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 21:12
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    I've got the e-book, and I'm 90% sure it's the right one, so thanks to @DavidW, and if you want to post an answer please do, otherwise I'll answer it tomorrow.
    – astaines
    Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 22:04
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    @Jontia It's always possible to conflate one work with another that has a few similarities.
    – Spencer
    Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 22:13

1 Answer 1

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Since several of us have independently thought of it, and other than the dates it's a good fit, I'm going to propose The Praxis, first book of the Dread Empire's Fall trilogy by Walter Jon Williams. The only problem with this identification is that it was not published until 2002.

The last of the Shaa, Anticipation of Victory, has just decided that it is time for him to die. The Shaa are a race of extremely long-lived (Anticipation of Victory is over 12 000 Shaa years old) and very large aliens (twice the size of a Terran).

The viewpoint character, Lieutenant Gareth Martinez' commanding officer, Commander Enderby, announces that he will join the ritual mass suicide to honour the Shaa's death:

"Of course, following the Great Master's death, I will kill myself."

Lieutenant Gareth Martinez, keeping pace alongside the longer-legged Fleet Commander Enderby, felt himself stumble as he heard the words.

"My lord?" He drove his legs through the stumble, to stride once more off Enderby's left shoulder. Their heels rang again in unison on the shaved, glittering asteroid material that floored the Commandery.

"I've volunteered," Enderby said in his prosaic, literal tone. "My family needs a representative on the pyre, and I’m the most suitable candidate. I'm at the apex of my career, my children are well-established, and my wife has given me a divorce." He looked at Martinez from beneath his level white brows. "My death will assure that my name, and my family's name, will be honored forever."

Enderby has arranged for Martinez to transfer to another position aboard a ship:

"I've spoken to Captain Tarafah about you," Enderby went on. "He's agreed to take you aboard as communications officer on the Corona."

Cover of "The Praxis" by Walter Jon Williams

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  • Well, if this is indeed OP's book, then perhaps that last line is why it suddenly popped into their head Commented May 8, 2021 at 4:36

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