In the chronology of the Darkover series, this book fallsjust before "Sharra's Exile" and "Winds ofDarkover", and just after "The Bloody Sun". It is thestory of the Sharra rebellion (often referred to in the books thatfall later in the series) and is the story of the coming of age ofRegis Hasteur, Lew Alton, and Danilo Syrtis, all characters seen inother books as older adults.
If you're looking to start reading theseries, this is as good a book to start with as any. If you've readany other book in the series and liked it, this book is a must.
Meanwhile, the orphaned Regis Hastur is caught between following his heart and going on one of the Terran starships, and doing his duty to his grandfather and his family by taking his place in the Comyn Council and marrying. Regis is embarassed by his seeming lack of laran ability, and has been told by Lew that he has the gift but it is for some reason barriered. After a long struggle, he realizes that, since laran and sexual awareness often awaken together, he had repressed his laran along with his desire for other men. He has fallen in love with his best friend in the Guardsmen, which is complicated by the presence of a sexual predator with a taste for very young men among the trainers of the Guardsman cadets. It is also complicated by Danilo's cristoforo religious beliefs, which frown upon homosexuality. Regis and Danilo's love story has a much happier ending than that of Lew and Marjorie, another member of the Sharra circle. In the end, Lew's desire to break away from family and tradition leaves him closer than ever to his father, even as he wishes he could blame his father for leading him into the tragedy of the Sharra Rebellion.