Is The Sea Of Clouds Part Of A Book Series?

2025-12-30 09:04:00 224

3 Answers

Sawyer
Sawyer
2025-12-31 10:27:43
Someone asked me about 'The Sea of Clouds' last week, and it sent me down a rabbit hole! Turns out, it’s a standalone short story by Liu Cixin (of 'The Three-Body Problem' fame), tucked into his collection 'the wandering earth.' It’s a haunting little piece about a futuristic city suspended above clouds, grappling with isolation and human fragility. Liu’s knack for blending hard sci-fi with poetic melancholy shines here—no sprawling series, just a compact punch of ideas.

But if you want more cloud-themed series, 'cradle' by Will Wight has floating castles and sky realms galore. The series escalates from martial arts grounded in dirt to battles among celestial storms. That gradual ascent feels like watching a storm gather—quiet at first, then utterly electrifying.
Kelsey
Kelsey
2026-01-02 15:32:33
I stumbled across 'The Sea of Clouds' while digging into obscure RPG lore recently! In the game 'Genshin Impact,' it’s a region called Liyue, where towering mountains pierce through perpetual clouds, creating this dreamy, floating world. The design is inspired by Chinese mythology, and the way the developers weave folklore into the landscape is breathtaking. It’s not part of a book series, but the storytelling depth in the game’s environmental details makes it feel like one. Every cliffside shrine and hidden quest there feels like a chapter from an epic novel.

That said, if you’re craving something literary, check out 'The Cloud Roads' by Martha Wells—part of her 'Books of the Raksura' series. It’s got a similar vibe: airborne civilizations and sky-bound adventures. The prose is lush, and the worldbuilding makes you wish you could sprout wings and join the characters. Sometimes, the best 'series' connections aren’t direct but thematic, y’know?
Emilia
Emilia
2026-01-04 01:06:42
Oh, 'The Sea of Clouds'—what a gorgeous title! It actually makes me think of two possibilities. First, there’s the fantastical floating ocean in 'Made in Abyss,' an anime where the titular abyss is layered with surreal environments, including a shimmering sea of clouds. But if we’re talking books, it might be referencing 'The Sea of Clouds' from the 'Empire of Salt' series by Adrian Tchaikovsky. That trilogy blends sci-fi and fantasy, with the sea acting as a mysterious, ever-shifting boundary. I adore how Tchaikovsky uses it as both a physical and metaphorical barrier—it’s got this eerie beauty that lingers in your mind long after reading.

Alternatively, I wonder if someone’s mixing it up with 'The Sea of Fog,' a common motif in Chinese xianxia novels like 'Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation.' Those stories often feature mystical clouds as realms where immortals duel or meditate. The imagery is always so vivid—like you could almost step into the pages and feel the mist on your skin. Either way, titles involving clouds tend to promise something ethereal and expansive, which I’m forever a sucker for.
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