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Ancient Shores

Jack Mcdevitt

Ancient Shores Jack Mcdevitt List Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 64 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

A Good Story Not Told 3 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

ANCIENT SHORES is the second book by Jack McDevitt that I've read. I previously read INFINITY BEACH and liked it a lot, so I went into this one with high expectations. Early on, it lived up to those expectations. The story begins with the finding of a strange artifact in a wheat field up near the Canadian border. It's a perfectly preserved sailboat containing technology and materials unknown to contemporary society. Further seaching uncovers a roundhouse nearby that would have sat on the shore of an ancient lake that covered the area thousands of years ago. The roundhouse is on Sioux Reservation land and includes a portal.

It's a fascinating story to this point. There are myriad possibilities. Who left the boat behind? Where did they go? Why didn't they come back? Aliens? Alien contact? Where does the portal lead? Crumbling ruins? Advanced societies? Strange and/or habitable planets? Unfortunately, the rest of the book spends little space exploring these intriguing questions. Instead, it devolves into a story of the political battle among various elements for control of the artifacts. Along the way, the ramifications of the mysterious technologies for the world's economy is grossly overdone. Sub-plots, including one involving an alien presence, are opened but then left dangling.

For me, ANCIENT SHORES was an extremely promising story, the most interesting aspects of which are left unresolved and largely unexplored. Many great potential plotlines open up, but they're all left open while McDevitt pursues a mundane story and ultimately brings it to a weak conclusion. It's readable and mildly entertaining, but fell far short what it could have been. It would have been easier to swallow if there was a sequel, or if this was the first of a series. As far as I know, however, it isn't.

Editorial Review:

It turned up in a North Dakota wheat field: a triangle, like a shark's fin, sticking up from the black loam. Tom Lasker did what any farmer would have done. He dug it up. And discovered a boat, made of a fiberglass-like material with an utterly impossible atomic number. What it was doing buried under a dozen feet of prairie soil two thousand miles from any ocean, no one knew. True, Tom Lasker's wheat field had once been on the shoreline of a great inland sea, but that was a long time ago -- ten thousand years ago.

A return to science fiction on a grand scale, reminiscent of the best of Heinlein, Simak, and Clarke, Ancient Shores is the most ambitious and exciting SF triumph of the decade, a bold speculative adventure that does not shrink from the big questions -- and the big answers.

Riddle of Stars

Patricia A McKillip

Riddle of Stars Patricia A McKillip By: Doubleday
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

The Riddle-Master Trilogy 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

Reading McKillip's great fantasy trilogy "Riddle of Stars" is like trying to solve the riddle of someone else's partially-glimpsed dream. You enter a rich world of metaphor, sometimes baffling but always beautiful. A standard hero's quest is overgrown with fabulous beasts, children of stone, and death-dealing harps.

In the first book, "The Riddle-Master of Hed" Land-Ruler Morgon of Hed wins a bride and a crown in a riddling contest with a ghost. He wipes the cow manure off of his boots and sets sail from his tiny island kingdom, unsure as to whether his beautiful, red-haired prize has any interest in marrying a farmer-king. In pursuit of an answer, Morgon detours to the College of Riddle-Masters at Caithnard, where he was once a student and where his bride's brother still resides. His companion for the journey is Deth, the thousand-year-old High One's harpist.

Morgon and Deth are shipwrecked, and once Morgon regains his memory he discovers that he has unknown, shape-changing enemies who will stop at nothing to destroy him. As he flees through the kingdoms of his world, he is befriended by the various land-rulers and is gifted with a harp and a sword that are decorated with three stars--identical to the birthmark of stars on his forehead. He also learns how to change his own shape into beasts and trees.

Finally Morgon makes his way to Erlenstar Mountain with Deth, the harpist, hoping that the High One will solve the riddle of his stars and defend him against his implacable enemies.

The heir of sea and fire referred to in the title of the second book in the trilogy is Raederle, Morgon of Hed's betrothed. She struggles against her shape-changer heritage, but gradually begins to tap into its power in order to protect Morgon. "Heir of Sea and Fire" begins in the spring of the year "following the strange disappearance of the Prince of Hed, who had, with the High One's harpist, vanished like a mist in Isig Pass..."

Raederle has reason to believe Morgon dead, since the land-rule of Hed has passed to Morgon's brother, Eliard. Or was land-rule ripped from Morgon while he was still alive? In a key passage, Raederle asks the High One's harpist, "What piece of knowledge did the Founder expect to find beneath the knowledge of when the barley would begin to sprout or what trees in his orchard had a disease eating secretly at their hearts?"

The importance of the question lies in the inability of the harpist to answer it.

There are some great visuals in "Heir of Sea and Fire," especially in the sequence where Raederle calls up the dead of An and bargains with them to protect the man who is journeying across their land. I really feared for her life because of the bargain she made with the dead Kings, even though I've read a million fantasies and the heroine never dies--at least not until the end of the trilogy.

In the final book of the "Riddle of Stars" trilogy, "Harpist in the Wind," the Star-bearer (Morgon of Hed) and Raederle of An, united at last, continue their search for their true identities. This book won the Locus Award in 1980 and I feel 'award-winning' is the least amount of praise one can apply to this trilogy. McKillip 'dreams awake' when she spins her fantasies, and that's how it feels to read them.

Love, family ties, and even magical bonds to the land play an important part in these novels, as they do in many other great fantasy epics such as 'Lord of the Rings' and Norton's Witchworld trilogy concerning the triplets Kemoc, Kyllan, and Kaththea. Vengeance, which was a prominent theme in "Heir of Sea and Fire" slows to a cold drizzle in "Harpist in the Wind" and in one case dries up completely.

Revenge might indeed be a 'dish best tasted cold' but if it gets too cold, the hero could end up feeling sorry for his erstwhile enemy or even forgiving him, as does Morgon. His gradual change from innocent farmer-prince, to vengeful shape-changer, to the Star-bearer spins out the most challenging riddle of this trilogy. Who is the Star-bearer? What is his true purpose?

"Stars, children with faces of stone, the fiery, broken shards of a bowl he had smashed in Astrin's hut, dead cities, a dark-haired shape-changer, a harpist, all resolved under his probing into answerless riddles"--at least in the beginning of "Harpist in the Wind."

There are scenes of high astonishment and magic in 'Harpist,' most especially in Morgon's discovery of wizards other than the evil Ghisteslwchlohm who are still alive, most prominently Yrth, the creator of Morgon's three-starred harp. Or is this another of the riddles the Star-bearer must solve? What is the relationship between Deth, the High One's harpist who betrayed Morgon to Ghisteslwchlohm, and Yrth, a great wizard who had once been called the Harpist of the magical city of Lungold?

At trilogy's end, all riddles are answered and the Star-bearer comes into his heritage, although his friends and loved ones (and the reader) seem to realize who he is long before he does. Such is usually the case with heroes.

Editorial Review:

Illustrated step-by-step instructions explain the techniques for canning, freezing, drying, and pickling. 179,000 copies in print.

Alector's Choice (Corean Chronicles, Book 4)

L. E. Modesitt

Alector's Choice (Corean Chronicles, Book 4) L. E. Modesitt Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 17 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

Alector’s Choice takes place several thousand years before the events chronicled in the Legacies Trilogy, at the time when Corus is ruled by the Talent-magic of the Duarchy. The Myrmidons of Justice command the skies riding their fearsome pteridons.
As the Alector Colonel of Myrmidons, Dainyl is the fourth highest ranking military officer of the Duarchy. Alectors are a race apart from the normal inhabitants of Corus, from another world. But there is a rebellion brewing against them.
Captain Mykel is a young officer potentially Talented and unaware that, should he ever discover that Talent, his life is forfeit. For Mykel is not an Alector, and only Alectors are allowed to use Talent.
The rebellion spirals out of control, spurred by treachery, corruption, and greed -- and aided by the re-appearance of the ancient soarers, a fragile humanoid race of flying beings thought to have become extinct. A terrible war is brewing, and one, or both of these men are the only ones who might stand against it.


Wolverine by Claremont & Miller (Marvel Premiere Classic)

Chris Claremont, Frank Miller

Wolverine by Claremont & Miller (Marvel Premiere Classic) Chris Claremont, Frank Miller Amazon Price: $13.59
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 27 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Always a Classic 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

The first mini delving into the story of Wolverine as a character. In this book we get to see the great background that made Wolverine/Logan the Icon he is today. I recommend this for any fan of Wolverine and or the X-Men. As a warning the dialogue is typical Claremont as its very comic booky and sometimes cheesy.

The Beginning 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Great book awesome story and fun to read. Read in one sitting and then read it again a few days later. Couldn't keep my hands off it. Simply incredible way to bring it all together.

One of the best comic stories ever written... 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Combining the talents of two of comics' true superstars, Chris Claremont and Frank Miller, this 6-part story takes the character of Wolverine in a whole new direction and served as the start of his own long-running solo series.

A must have for fans of the character, fans of the X-men, or just those who love a good story.

Editorial Review:

The master of mutants joins the master of ninjas in Wolverine's first solo series - replete with romance, intrigue and mayhem! Our beleaguered berserker's in Japan on a mission of the heart, if he can survive the Hand first! Plus: the introduction of everyone's favorite riotous ronin, Yukio! Collects Wolverine #1-4, Uncanny X-Men #172-173.

The Dragonlover's Guide to Pern, Second Edition

Jody Lynn Nye, Anne McCaffrey

The Dragonlover's Guide to Pern, Second Edition Jody Lynn Nye, Anne McCaffrey Amazon Price: $12.89
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 19 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Excellent reference, but needs to be revised 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

This was when it was issued an excellent reference for Pern, but it has since been very dated by the publication of books such as Masterharper of Pern and Skies of Pern. And the information in it is extremely shallow compared to some of the excellent wesites that are available online. I would be delighted if Jody Lynn Nye and Annne McCaffrey would sit down and incorporate some of the work Pern fans have been doing in the interim years and make this a truly authoritative Pern reference book.

Editorial Review:

An indispensable companion guide to the wonderful world of Anne McCaffrey and her dragons

Guaranteed to enrich every armchair traveler's journey into McCaffrey's legendary world, this illuminating guide leaves no stone in Pern unturned! Both faithful fans and newcomers will relish the fascinating history and lore of . . .

THE DRAGONS: How they developed from little fire-lizards into the huge telepathic creatures that carry human riders and fight Thread

THE PEOPLE: How they live, the clothes they wear, the food they eat

THE PLACES: What to see and do in individual Holds and Weyrs

THREAD: Its appearance and behavior, the threat it poses, and ways to combat it

UPDATED TO INCLUDE THE RENEGADES OF PERN, ALL THE WEYRS OF PERN, THE CHRONICLES OF PERN: FIRST FALL, AND THE DOLPHINS OF PERN

The Wise Woman and Other Stories (Fantasy Stories of George MacDonald)

George MacDonald, Craig Yoe

The Wise Woman and Other Stories (Fantasy Stories of George MacDonald) George MacDonald, Craig Yoe Amazon Price: $10.88
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

CLASSIC--SUPERB 5 out of 5 stars.
70 of 70 people found this review helpful.

The standout of this collection is the title story, "The Wise Woman, or, The Obstinate Princess." The princess in question is Rosamund, whose royal parents have spoiled her absolutely rotten. In fact, they are sick of her, she's so disgustingly violent and selfish (thanks largely to their 'care'). Enter the Wise Woman, who steals Rosamund away underneath her voluminous cloak and takes Rosamund to her cottage, which is miles away from nowhere--and bigger on the inside than the outside. Here, for the first time, Rosamund begins to learn that her wishes are not what the world revolves around. Very slowly. Before that happens, however, she enters another world through a picture and takes the place of another spoiled brat, Agnes, daughter of a shepherd and shepherdess. Agnes takes Rosamund's place. The Wise Woman does her best to save both girls, whose (to paraphrase Burke) intemperate minds mean that they cannot be free; their passions have forged their fetters. I can't tell you how the story ends, however. You'll have to find out for yourself.

MacDonald writes in an elegant, leisurely style (he takes three pages to describe a rainstorm at the beginning), and the story is rather long for a story--a 100 pages, give or take a few. But these are not really drawbacks. To adult readers, the story is a rather obvious, but effective, allegory of God's offer of redemption to humanity. To child readers, it is simply a good story; they will probably miss the parallel, but get the message. The story is filled with memorable scenes and images: the little cottage, the Wise Woman's eerie song, Agnes in her bubble (in more ways than one), Rosamund losing her temper with the little child in the boat. These make as much of an impression as the ideas, especially the recurring one that it is not enough to good; that's easily done when one's in a good mood. The goodness that counts is that done against one's inclinations--a hard doctrine that negates most of my good deeds, if nobody else's.

In short, this is a haunting book. It is well-written, it is thoughtful, it stands up both as a strong story and as a sermon, it entertains, it rebukes; it rewards repeated reading with additional meaning.

Editorial Review:

This is one volume in the four-volume collection of the complete fantasy stories of George MacDonald, the great nineteenth-century innovator of modern fantasy, whose works influenced C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Charles Williams.

Crystal Line

Anne Mccaffrey

Crystal Line Anne Mccaffrey Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 21 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Words McCaffrey is not allowed to use anymore: 3 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

"Yarran beer"
"good brew"
"Jewel Junk"
"Lanzecki"

Though I greatly enjoyed Crystal Singer, and thought Killashandra, though flawed and not up to the quality of Crystal Singer, was a good enough read, though the bodice-ripper aspects of the romance were irritating. But Crystal Line promises a lot and delivers little. The characters are getting wearisome, Killashandra's memory loss is irritating and becomes a very tiresome and overused plot device, and McCaffrey falls into the trap so many series writers do - of using the same phrases and references again and again, ad nauseam, to the point where the reader wonders if the author is simply cutting and pasting lines and phrases from the previous two books. How many times must these characters drink Yarran beer in these books and act as if each and every sip is a great revelation of a "good brew"? Let them discover something else to drink, for heaven's sake! It becomes embarrassing.

For fans of the Crystal Singer series, this is a fairly satisfying ending, but a lot of red pencil wielding on the part of a good editor who was aware of how often McCaffrey was re-using tired old phrases in a misguided attempt to tie the three books together would have been a very good idea.

But then, this is the author who has used the word "dragon" in titles to the point where it's painful and gives rise to continuous jokes about the possible risque titles for the next "Dragon-whatever" book. Repetition obviously isn't a problem for her, or her devoted fan following.

Editorial Review:

"A treat for long-time McCaffrey fans, a good read and a satisfying look at one of the most haunting facets of the crystal singers' profession."
LOCUS
When Killashandra Ree joined the mysterious Heptite Guild, she knew that she would be forever changed. Crystal singing brought ecstasy and pain, near-eternal life...and gradual loss of memory. What she hadn't counted on was the loneliness she felt when her heart still remembered what her mind had forgotten. Fortunately, someone still cared enough to try to salvage what was left of Killashandra's mind. But she would have to learn to open herself--to another person, and to all her unpleasant memories.

Scion of Cyador: The New Novel in the Saga of Recluce

L. E. Modesitt

Scion of Cyador: The New Novel in the Saga of Recluce L. E. Modesitt Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 17 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

L. E. Modesitt, Jr. is one of the standard setters in fantasy today and his most famous series is the Saga of Recluce. Each novel fills in pieces of the history of this land where Chaos and Order strive to maintain a magical balance.

Scion of Cyador continues the story begun in Magi'i of Cyador. Exploring the rich depths of the history of Recluce, Magi'i of Cyador introduced Lorn, a talented boy born into a family of Magi'i. A diligent student mage who lacked blind devotion, Lorn was made a lancer officer and shipped off to the frontier--a career that comes with a 50% mortality rate.

Having survived his extended stint fighting both barbarian raiders and the giant beasts of the Accursed Forest, Lorn has proven himself to be a fine officer . . . perhaps too fine an officer. As his prowess has grown, so has his number of enemies and rivals. Too much success has made him a marked man. When he returns to his home, both he and his young family become targets while all of Cyad is in upheaval over deadly political infighting. But Lorn is now hardened, a deadly fighter himself, especially when the Empire is at stake.

Scion of Cyador is the completion of another grand story in the Recluce saga.

Scion of Cyador is the eleventh book in the saga of Recluce.

The Forgotten Beasts of Eld (Magic Carpet Books)

Patricia A. McKillip

The Forgotten Beasts of Eld (Magic Carpet Books) Patricia A. McKillip Amazon Price: $6.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 93 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Verdict on the re-read: so-so 3 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

I first read this book twenty-odd years ago; I can't recall much about my reaction to it then. I also couldn't recall too much about the plot prior to rereading, which may say something about the impression it made on me. I know I didn't go off looking for more Patricia McKillip to read afterwards. But I did keep the book, which indicates to me that I wasn't completely turned off by it.

Recently I came across it and decided to have another go (mainly because I couldn't remember a thing about it.) I believe my reaction now that I have reread it could be summed up in the current parlance as "Meh."

It isn't a big waste of time, being a quick read, and it has a certain charm to it. But it's talky and short on action, the characters are somewhat on the shallow side, certain crucial plot elements don't get developed very well, and the Tale-of-the-Ancient-Bard style sounds a little stilted after a while. Throw in a magical Boar who talks in riddles:
"The Lord of Dorn ran three times around the doorless walls of the house of the Witch of Enyth, and then walked into the wall and it vanished like a dream."
and the whole thing can start to sound a bit like a parody of itself.

In favor of the book, it centers on a powerful, if immature, female protagonist capable of taking care of herself. She grows in wisdom and ethics by the end, having learned something about herself, and something about the power of self-sacrificing love. It's clean enough to give to an older preteen with good reading skills; the seamiest moment in the whole book is when Mithran makes a pass at Sybel, and he isn't able to get past bodice-ripping and cleavage-nuzzling before Sybel zaps him. There's also little graphic violence, given the setting.

On the other hand, there's a two-dimensionality to most of the characters, and not just the secondary ones. Drede is just consumed with jealousy, suspicion, and fear; Sybel is just powerful, a little cocky, and a bit chilly; Coren is just profoundly in love with Sybel (and a wee bit vengeful, occasionally.) Maelga could have a darker side --on a couple of occasions it's mentioned that she's taken jobs more typical of Tony Soprano than Strega Nona-- but this is never explored and she's pretty much entirely a wise, maternal mentor to Sybel.

Considering the amount of intrigue that is generated in the course of the story, it would seem that there would be unprobed depths to these characters. Unfortunately, they remain largely unprobed. Why does the icy Sybel, who shuns the political machinations of ordinary humans, suddenly become so consumed by revenge as to insert herself right into the thick of them? Why does she give in to this so soon after breaking Coren of his thirst for revenge? Surely his claim against Drede is as legitimate as hers. Why is Drede so insecure that the presumed infidelity of one woman ultimately destroys his faith in almost everyone? Why the heck does Sybel, at the end, feel the need to let go not only of her revenge, but also all control of a looming disaster she has helped to launch? Couldn't she stick around to make sure the battle ends harmlessly, then release her animals? Doesn't she feel she owes that much to Tam and Coren? I can't say how I may have felt about Sybel's final abdication of power and responsibility at nineteen, but from the perspective of twenty-odd years more, I'm not inclined to go along quietly with the author's attempt to make a moral victory of it. Chalk it up to the Pottery Barn Rule.

I think many readers of fantasy, particularly those of the male variety, could find the book a disappointment. (I offered it to my eldest son, a certified fantasy geek, a few years ago. I don't think he made it past Chapter 2.) This book is too chatty by half, and too little of the chat is actually enhancing to what little plot or action there is. Some of it, at the end particularly, is downright confusing and leaves the reader wondering if the characters are exchanging information, or just talking past each other. Action is lacking, and usually brought up as an afterthought and secondhand. Pages are devoted to planning for a great battle; the battle itself is wrapped up without actual combat in a few paragraphs.

For a few hours' worth of light reading, this book beats a trashy romance novel. But if you're looking for a really good Norse epic, I'd stick with Tolkein or go all the way back to the source and find a good translation of the Eddas or Sagas or Beowulf.


Editorial Review:

Sixteen when a baby is brought to her to raise, Sybel has grown up on Eld Mountain. Her only playmates are the creatures of a fantastic menagerie called there by wizardry. Sybel has cared nothing for humans, until the baby awakens emotions previously unknown to her. And when Coren--the man who brought this child--returns, Sybel's world is again turned upside down.

Fall of Angels

L. E. Modesitt

Fall of Angels L. E. Modesitt List Price: $25.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 19 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Great read :) 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 2 people found this review helpful.

I want to first mention that I'm not a big fan of sci-fi in books. I love fantasy (dungeons and dragons) books, but (generally) dislike fantasy TV/Movies because they don't do it well. My feelings on Sci-fi are usually the opposite. When I first started reading Fall of Angels I thought I'd made a huge mistake because it starts off as a straight sci-fi book, and yes, maybe those ray guns on the cover should have been a warning, but the covers on the previous Recluse books have been completely unrelated to the story inside, so I basically stopped looking at the covers.

This book has the usual extremely slow, hard to get into introduction that I've found in all the Recluse books I've read so far. This one was slightly less boring than usual, but I still found it took me a week to past the first quarter of the book.

Once you get into the book, describing it to you would make it seem really repetitive. Nylan builds a weapon, Ryba and the Guards use it to decimate the attackers, Nylan gets sad because of the use of force, repeat. ;) Sprinkle that with Nylan's comments about how stories ignore the boring building of societies and infrastructure, and pay attention to the big battles etc.

Anyway, I really enjoyed the twist of an advanced civilization getting used to the backwards word of Westwind. I liked getting the full story/background of the beginnings of Recluse. I think this was one of the better books from this series.

Editorial Review:

Nylan, the engineer and builder, races against time to raise a great tower on the plateau known as the Roof of the World, a place in which the exiled women warriors will create new lives, before the rulers of lowland nations come to obliterate them all.

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