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A Storm of Swords (Song of Ice and Fire)

George R.R. Martin

A Storm of Swords (Song of Ice and Fire) George R.R. Martin List Price: $16.50
By: Voyager
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Editorial Review:

Split into two books for the paperback, the third volume in George R.R. Martin's superb and highly acclaimed epic fantasy A Song of Ice and Fire continues the richest, most exotic and mesmerising saga since The Lord of the Rings. The Seven Kingdoms are divided by revolt and blood feud, and winter approaches like an angry beast. Beyond the Northern borders, wildlings leave their villages to gather in the ice and stone wasteland of the Frostfangs. From there, the renegade Brother Mance Rayder will lead them South towards the Wall. Robb Stark wears his new-forged crown in the Kingdom of the North, but his defences are ranged against attack from the South, the land of House Stark's enemies the Lannisters. His sisters are trapped there, dead or likely yet to die, at the whim of the Lannister boy-king Joffrey or his depraved mother Cersei, regent of the Iron Throne. And Daenerys Stormborn will return to the land of her birth to avenge the murder of her father, the last Dragon King on the Iron Throne.

Portraits of His Children

George R. R. Martin

Portraits of His Children George R. R. Martin List Price: $4.99
By: Baen
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Excellent Stories 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

Mr. Martin is easily becoming one of my favorite authors. I will admit that I had not read any of his works until the `Song of Fire and Ice' series was created. I figure you have to begin somewhere though. While reading this book, I found that he not only can sweep you off to other worlds with ease, but also make you teary eyed when reviewing just what his characters are going through and the strength and/or weakness that they reveal. It's a shame that this book isn't more popular. It truly is great. From a group of men playing with all their heart in the last super bowl (only to be replaced with a computer with no emotion to emulate them), to a group of old `friends' finally confronted with their failures and being told why exactly they came to be, you'll be surprised by just how much you'll be pulled into their lives. There are eleven stories all together, and I'd recommend each and every one of them. All run the gamut of emotions. All represent a different facet of our lives.

On a further note, I don't have a clue what the `Incest' guy was talking about. The story that is the namesake of the book has a scene where a father and daughter are laying together in bed consoling each other, I assume that he might have interpreted what happened incorrectly (or then again, perhaps I did).

Editorial Review:

A collection of short science fiction tales by the Hugo and Nebula Award winner features a tale of an author who is visited by the characters from his novel and a little girl whose best friend is a dragon made of ice. Reprint.

Songs of Stars and Shadows

George R. R. Martin

Songs of Stars and Shadows George R. R. Martin List Price: $1.75
By: Pocket
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

AMAZING!! 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

"The Lonely Songs of Laren Dorr" was stirring and wonderful and is representative of this book as a whole. There are some real gems here if you can find this book. "Greywater Station" will please any science fiction story enthusiast. The Runners is a dark and disturbing story...I too am afraid of this Fat, Disgusting, Smiling and terrifying girl who haunts the man no matter where he runs....

Buy This Book if you can find it, Its expensive but worth every cent...

Thank You Mr. Martin

Relic113

More of George's Xcellent early work 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Another Xcellent collection of Martin's early short stories. "This Tower of Ashes" was George's choice 4 his best short story, 1nce upon a time; U may agree with him; it's very vivid & very moving. "The Lonely Songs of Laren Door" also has that wonderful, moody, romantic atmosphere of so much of George's early work. "Men of Graywater Station" (written with Howard Waldrop) is an above-average space thriller. "Night Shift" shows the flip-side of Martin's moody/romantic visions -- it's a very gritty, down-2-earth story about working on a future loading dock, comparing spaceships 2 long-distance trucking; definitely something different 4 George; U'll like it. "For a Single Yesterday" was also a personal favorite of George's, but 4 me it just misses; it Cms dry, nothing special. "And Seven Times Never Kill Man" is a routine space adventure. A couple others R merely average, nothing 2 get Xcited about. But the best stuff here is some of George's best work.

The Hugo Winners, Volume 5: Nine Prizewinning Science Fiction Stories (1980 - 1982)

Barry B. Longyear, George R. R. Martin

The Hugo Winners, Volume 5: Nine Prizewinning Science Fiction Stories (1980 - 1982) Barry B. Longyear, George R. R. Martin List Price: $18.95
By: Doubleday Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Some of the best short science fiction stories ever written 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Like all other areas of fiction, a science fiction story will evoke different responses in different people. Even the greatest stories of the time, so acknowledged by the author receiving a Hugo for writing it, fall into that category. This collection is no different; there were some that I found much more interesting than others. It contains the stories:

*) Enemy Mine, by Barry B. Longyear
*) Sandkings, by George R. R. Martin
*) The Way of the Cross and Dragon, by George R. R. Martin
*) Lost Dorsai, by Gordon R. Dickson
*) The Cloak and the Staff, by Gordon R. Dickson
*) Grotto of the Dancing Dear, by Clifford D. Simak
*) The Saturn Game, by Poul Anderson
*) Unicorn Variations, by Roger Zelazny
*) The Pusher, by John Varley

"Enemy Mine" has since been made into a movie that was a big hit.
In my opinion, three of the stories are truly great, "Enemy Mine", "Lost Dorsai" and "The Cloak and the Staff." The first and the third both deal with what I consider the most significant theme of science fiction, what will happen when humans encounter an intelligent species from another world. In "Enemy Mine" the other species (Dracons) is roughly of the same technical competence and temperament, so they engage in a ruthless war with the humans over space and supremacy. There is a much greater disparity in "The Cloak and the Staff." The Aalaag are technically superior and have conquered many other planets. The main character is human and serves the Aalaag and understands how futile resistance is. And yet, he starts a resistance movement that has no hope of success. I consider this one of the best science fiction stories every written and fortunately, Dickson expanded it into the book, "Way of the Pilgrim."
Collections of award-winning stories always contain a wide variation of themes and this one is no exception. However, unlike some others, even the worst of this group is very, very good and well worth reading.

Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads

George R. R. Martin

Quartet: Four Tales from the Crossroads George R. R. Martin Amazon Price: $15.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Glimpses of Genius 3 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

George R. R. Martin is my favourite living author, and having met him a few times in conventions, he's also a really great guy. That Quartet is a frustrating read has nothing at all to do with Martin's truly great writing prowess, and everything to do with the problematic selection of material.

Frankly, there are two possible audiences for 'Quartet', and the book is a somewhat scysophrenic appeal for both.

For the die hard fans such as myself, the collection offers 'Black and White and Red All Over', the beginning of an unfinished novel, and STARPORT, an unproduced pilot for a television series.

For the newbies, the collection features The Skin Trade, Martin's fantasy award winning werewolf novella, and Blood of the Dragon, an exerpt from 'A Game of Thrones'.

Thus, no matter in which category you belong, the collection is only half for you.

'Black & White� begins with a classic Martin line 'On that dump April Morning Ned Cullen started his day with a glass of cheap champagne gone flat, a cup of cold black coffee, and a Murder'. Merely reading that line made chills run down my spine. This, I knew immediately, was going to be top notch Martin.

And it is. The story of three journalists trying to solve a Jack the Ripper style Murder in later Victorian New York City is so obviously among Martin's best works that one is left amazingly frustrated to know that there is no ending, that the story ends in the middle of a scene, with a note from Martin which says, effectively 'that all I've got, sorry'.

As great as 'Black & White' is, though, you can see why it was rejected. The complicated structure, and the detailed description of NYC (Martin has a knack for the Historical narrative, and it is a pity he doesn't do it more often. Even more than in his Fantasy and Science Fiction, Martin has a way of making the past come alive) carries through a hundred pages in which, plot-wise, little yet happens. Martin is setting the base for the larger scheme, but, like Fevre Dream and A Storm of Swords, the build up is slow and meticulous and careful, unlike A Game of Thrones, where the action begins immediately. This is hardly a bad thing for itself, and Black & White handles the exposition superbly, but as exposition, you cannot see where he's going yet.

The Next piece is 'The Skin Trade', the werewolf novella. Willie and Randi are among Martin's most memorable characters, and the tale of haunted hunters is among his best. The only weakness might be the slightly too complicated plot - after several readings, I'm still not one hundred percent sure I know exactly who did what and why.

But there is so much great writing there, such a powerful and nonchalant description of the paranormal, and Martin's wonderful way of making the exotic into common life, without losing any of the majestic beauty

So you admit you're a werewolf?"
"A Lycanthrope... . So Sue Me. It's a medical condition. I got allergies, I got asthma, I got a bad back, and I got lycanthropy, is it my fault?'

But than, a different character describes himself "Perhaps I'll come for you myself some night. You ought to see me... . My fur is white now, pale as snow, but the stature, the majesty, the power, those have not left me... We are the dire wolves, the nightmares who haunt your racial memories, the dark shapes circling endlessly beyond the light of your fires."

An unproduced Screenplay, STARPORT, is a pilot for a series that never happened. As such, it is a shame that Martin doesn't tell us something of what he had planned for the series. It is difficult to judge the story on its own. For example, is Kim, the Nazi girlfriend of undercover cop Aaron, a character that was supposed to return again? If not, she gets much too much screentime.

STARPORT follows a police force in near future Chicago, where an alien constructed base exists. The screenplay does a good job of introducing some memorable characters, but the plot suffers. Usually, Martin is a masterplotter, his tales brilliantly conceived and excecuted. Here, however, the plot is little more then a mechanism to get the characters to meet and interact. Particularly weak is the solution to the mystery, which is obvious and expected, and robs us of a character which could have been a very effective source of conflict for the series.

But STARPORT is a great piece of writing anyway, and would have made a very good introduction to what might have been the best SF TV show in recent memory.

The final selection is an excerpt from A Game of Thrones, telling the story of Dany, the princess lost in the wilderness, wed to a barbarian but fearsome warrier. It is, of course, a very fine piece of work, the Dany narrative being one of the best realised parts in Martin's brilliant novel, but it is the least valuable in the bunch, because I doubt many readers of this book have not read it before. and I have the feeling that the amazing climax to the story is more effective as the end of A Game of Thrones, than as a conclusion for a supposedly self standing novella.

Ultimately, I greatly enjoyed Quartet, both the fiction and Martin's wonderful introductions, but as the selection of pieces included is problematic, I can only recommand Quartet to die hard -got to have everything- fans such as myself. If you are a casual reader, one who only read few if any Martin stories, you'll be much better off picking A Game of Thrones, Fevre Dream, the anthology Sandkings, or Robert Silverberg's Legends, which contains Martin's The Hedge Knight among much other great fiction, as introduction to one of today's greatest writers.

Editorial Review:

This trade paperback reprint of the Boskone 38 Book contains a sampling of Bokone 38 Guest of Honor, George R.R. Martin: three stories and one teleplay. Introduction by Melisssa Snodgrass. Dustjacket art by Charles Vess.

Down & Dirty (A Wild Cards Mosaic Novel, Wild Cards V)

Down & Dirty (A Wild Cards Mosaic Novel, Wild Cards V) By: Bantam Books
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Shadow Twin

Gardner R. Dozois, George R. R. Martin, Daniel Abraham

Shadow Twin Gardner R. Dozois, George R. R. Martin, Daniel Abraham List Price: $40.00
By: Subterranean Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Great Story! 5 out of 5 stars.
14 of 14 people found this review helpful.

Shadow Twin is a great little story in a beautifully designed book. This book took over 10 years to write, as the 3 authors all took turns writing and then moving onto various commitments. That being said, the story is not very long, but it is suspenseful and exciting from page 1.
Ramon wakes up in a mysterious tank surrounded by aliens that have a quest for him. He must find the other human that escaped from them. Since he is human, he would know how the other man will behave. Ramon is leashed like a police tracking dog, and sent out with an alien to supervise his mission. The tension of the chase, the harsh wilderness, and being a captive himself culminate into an unforgettable ending where Ramon discovers an unbelievable truth.
This story took a long time to produce, but it was worth the wait.

Relic113

Ramon Espejo is pretty sure he's dead 3 out of 5 stars.
5 of 6 people found this review helpful.

"Shadow Twin" is a finely crafted science-fiction novel that was started in the mid-1970s by Gardner Dozois. A few years later, Dozois passed the unfinished manuscript on to George R.R. Martin to complete -- but while both writers agreed the story had promise, neither could work up the initiative to finish it. Over the next 20-some years, the story languished in a creative limbo between them; both worked on it now and again, but neither could or would finish it. Then, in 2002, young turk Daniel Abraham got his mitts on it and finally polished the thing off. Whew!

An especially nice thing about this novel is that it doesn't read like a story assembled piecemeal over the course of three decades. Nor does it read like the work of three writers with their own voices and styles. "Shadow Twin" is a short science-fiction novel that packs a punch and leaves you thinking, and the three authors involved deserve kudos for a successful -- if long delayed -- collaboration.

by Tom Knapp, Rambles.(n e t) editor

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