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Juanita Coulson

Auteur de Tomorrow's Heritage

30+ oeuvres 1,146 utilisateurs 8 critiques 3 Favoris

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Séries

Œuvres de Juanita Coulson

Tomorrow's Heritage (1981) 193 exemplaires
The Web of Wizardry (1978) 146 exemplaires
Outward Bound (1982) 142 exemplaires
The Death God's Citadel (1980) 126 exemplaires
Star Sister (1990) 87 exemplaires
The Past of Forever (1989) 77 exemplaires
Legacy of Earth (1989) 72 exemplaires
Space Trap (1976) 55 exemplaires
Unto the Last Generation (1975) 49 exemplaires
The Winds of Gath / Crisis on Cheiron (Ace Double H-27) (1967) — Contributeur — 46 exemplaires
Derai / The Singing Stones (Ace Double H-77) (1968) — Auteur — 42 exemplaires
Dark Priestess (1977) 22 exemplaires
Crisis on Cheiron (1967) 12 exemplaires
Fire of the Andes (1979) 12 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Star Trek: The New Voyages (1976) — Contributeur — 760 exemplaires
Tales of Ravenloft (1994) — Contributeur — 188 exemplaires
Women at War (1995) — Contributeur — 153 exemplaires
Tales of the Witch World 3 (1990) — Contributeur — 150 exemplaires
Beyond Time (1976) — Contributeur — 42 exemplaires
Cassandra Rising (1978) — Contributeur — 19 exemplaires
Terra-Astra, Nr. 306., Schnittpunkt im All (1977) — Contributeur, quelques éditions1 exemplaire

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Critiques

The writing is good, the mystery is good, although not everything is answered. The descriptions of the art and surroundings are good.
 
Signalé
chibitika | Sep 29, 2021 |
More of the same: political, social & financial tawdriness, but now an ET stirs the pot. Again, a tedious beginning with the action really kicking in toward the end…and we know what the end will be, as the FTL drive crashes again and again, killing and/or horribly maiming the most important characters; and the hibernation ship heads off to colonize a new planet.
 
Signalé
majackson | Aug 9, 2021 |
With a very tedious beginning, the story opens up to a pretty brisk YA political thriller…sadly, with a kind of hokey ending.
The hero belongs to an illustrious, and wealthy, family that is working, not very hard, to keep the family together. The older brother's political ambitions to be the de facto elected ruler of the world are hampered by his siblings' ambitions. All of this in the remnants of several horrific world wars where no political group trusts any other. Meanwhile, to make things more complicated, one of the siblings discovers that an alien artifact is homing in on the solar system and wants to talk to them. The wrong attitude to all this is assumed by the wrong people who want to assume the worst and are struggling to destroy the hero's rich family hegemony...and the alien artifact. All at the cost of human viability on Earth.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
majackson | 2 autres critiques | Aug 5, 2021 |
I selected this book knowing that it was originally published in 1978, by an author who was most prolific during that decade. Although that's also the decade when I started reading sci-fi and fantasy avidly, I'd never read anything by her - and wanted to see what I'd missed out on!

Well... it was OK. However, the plot was firmly within genre tropes, without any strikingly original flourishes. The language was mainly unremarkable - but interspersed with occasional stilted phrases and overly-florid passages.

The main character, Danaer (I'll call him Dan) is a warrior of the horse tribes of Destre-Y, a country which has long been in conflict with the neighboring kingdom of Clarique, although both groups are part of the land of Krantin. When Krantin is invaded by warriors from over the sea from Maukland, led by an evil and power-hungry wizard who has no compunctions about using men as zombie warriors to gain personal advantage, Dan must try to help form an alliance between Clarique and Destre-Y in order to work together and repel the attack.

It doesn't hurt that one of the wizards of Clarique is a most-alluring young Sorceress named Lira, whom Dan has no trouble wanting to ally himself with at all. Soon their alliance is more than professional. Together - and accompanied by a fearsome sidekick in the person of the huge but goodhearted warrior Gordyan, they may be able to save their homeland and create a unified Krantin.

Before we get there though, there will be a lot of swords & sorcery.

Since this is clearly advertised as "Book 1" I was afraid that it'd end on a cliffhanger - but I was pleased to find that, no, this book wraps everything up in a nice, fully-resolved manner - it's fully a stand-alone.

Many thanks to Venture Press and NetGalley for the opportunity to read. As always, my opinions are solely my own.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AltheaAnn | 1 autre critique | Feb 9, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
30
Aussi par
10
Membres
1,146
Popularité
#22,410
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
8
ISBN
29
Langues
2
Favoris
3

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