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Raptor-Red

Raptor-Red

List Price: $17.00
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A truly raptorous response
Review: Having cheerfully murdered hundreds of these poor creatures while playing Trespasser on my PC recently, I was intrigued to find a story in which they're not always the bad guys. The heroine of this book is intelligent, playful, resourceful, fiercely loyal and a mate that any male would be proud to have standing by his side. Fellers, before you send away for some prehistoric amber, I may as well add that she is also a ruthlessly efficient predator who would probably hunt you down (and slice you up) in seconds. Robert Bakker's effortless, reader-friendly prose lets you enter her world and share the ups and downs of raptor life with a refreshing lack of textbook dullness. This is the same style that made a bestseller out of The Dinosaur Heresies, deservedly so. I found Raptor Red a nice straightforward read, and unexpectedly moving. Fortunately for us puny mammals, no-one has (yet!) recreated a Utahraptor in the flesh, outside fiction; they're still extinct. However, experiencing Robert Bakker's extremely persuasive and fluent storytelling, I can at least see why the birds-are-dinosaurs theory is alive and kicking.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thoughts shared by an intellectual animal B4 man evolved
Review: Raptor Red as a fine work of artful text extends knowledge of it's time period and shows how animals lived and worked to just survive the great changes in the Earth at that time. The hero, Raptor Red shares her deepest thoughts and hopes while trying to make it hour by hour in a very unique world of so long ago. Bakker has a natural knowledge of the translation of what he sees in the field of bones to a usable and understanding that transends the echo of the voices of a past long ago to a story that should be enjoyed and re-read by all ages, and a fine book that should be shared and on school book shelves. The source and content will be enjoyed in an informing way to adults within their own experiences. I was pleasently surprised when my son asked me to read it, saying how much he liked it. A rare book in the science of today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The dinosaur's perspective
Review: Reading the dinosaur record is reading much conjecture and hypothesis. Although the theories are straightforward for the scientist and enthusiast, the average reader may have difficulty following the terminology and statistics. This narrative, however, makes the dinosaur legacy into an easy-to-follow story.

We follow the life of a female Utahraptor known as Raptor Red. The author allows you to see and feel things from her perspective as he tells you about life in the time of the dinosaurs. We read of the other dinosaurs and how they interacted with the raptors. We follow Raptor Red on the hunt as well as courtship. We also read of the smaller mammals as a foreshadowing of how the dominant species will change.

At no time does this book read like a textbook. I would recommend this to anyone wanting to learn a bit more about our dinosaur predecessors.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The review of Raptor Red
Review: This title "Raptor Red" depicts the life of a female velociraptor at the decline of the dinosaur society. Raptors have been described as the most efficient hunters of the dinosaur community, and is a perfect subject for a novel. Bakker uses colorful imagery words to paint a lush picture that helps feed the storyline. It begins with tragedy, and follows the "Raptor Red" through trials and tribulations that show the complexity of Bakker's theories of dinosaurs. Bakker expresses "Raptor Red's" luck many times, with stories within themselves. This book is an excellent chance for readers to excape the modern world and enter a time that leaves your imagination to paint the pictures. I suggest this book to anyone who is interested in a ficticous stories with excellent storylines. If you love to use your imagination, you will love to read this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: In the claws of the raptor--a new look at dinosaurian life
Review: Robert Bakker writes a great novel. It's amazing how he can tell a story with just thoughts and descriptions, and make you believe the characters. He gives you his opinion first hand on dinosaur life, but at the same time tells a good story. His dinosaurs are not lumbering ferocious giants, but real, almost sentient creatures, an role which dinosaurs--especially carnivores--have not filled very often. The story itself is well written. Raptor Red is taken through various terrains and hardships, and even emotional conflicts, such as the friction between her consort and sister; through a flood, a drought, and a near-death experience with a deinonychus pack. There is also humor in the novel, and even some small pop culture referneces in the narritive. In short, a well-written, entertaining book, and great for dinophiles.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perspectives
Review: This wonderful, jewel of a book takes the reader millions of years into the past. It is an exciting story of just how dinosaur life might have been. Bakker offers a scientific look into the world of the Raptor. His ideas are very well offered and he manages to keep an amazing amount of action throughout the story. He pulls at the emotions and feeds the mind at the same time. I just wish he would do other dinosaur based novels. Wonderful read! If you grew up like me, loving dinosaurs, this is a book for you! Bakker seems to be a supporter of evolutionary theory, but the book is a great story none the less.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Raptor Red
Review: Raptor Red
Robert T. Baker
Clement Lim

This book is just amazing. When I first read it I was hooked on it the minute the first word started. Robert T. Baker describes every aspect of the Mesozoic Era through the eyes of a young Utahraptor who calls herself red. Every piece fits perfectly as Robert describes life of that time period and the Utahraptors impact on American dinosaur life. This book is also a great resource information as it tells how exactly the muscles, coordination, and strategy are all mixed into one big fight for food and survival. Nothing in the whole entire world can be better than that.
The story starts out as Robert T. Baker describes a hunt. Raptor Red looks out of a fern bush and surveys a pack of mating Astrodon with her mate. Soon enough they choose a young male who isn't paying attention. As soon as they're limbs twitch, their off to hunt. The male is alarmed but by then it's to late. The raptors have already slashed at their prey with extreme ferocity. No matter how many times he tries to escape them the raptors follow. Soon their most deadly claw kills their prey with the utmost quickness. However, after the feast a terrible thing happens. Raptor Red's mate sinks into some quicksand. Since raptors make excellent killers but poor diggers, she hopelessly watches as her mate for the last 5 year dies.
Raptor Red soon gets right back up on her feet after her shock dies down. During her search for a new mate however, she finds her sister's chicks and rushes off to go meet her. They soon find a plump female Iguanadon and rips her apart in a flurry of slashes and brings the carcass back for some lunch. One day after being thoroughly well fed she finds herself strangely attracted to some red flowers. Soon herds start coming and mate with each other as their are so many of their own kind around. Rapor Red finds a male older than her. As soon as the male looks back, they start a courtship dance, a necessary ritual for mating. After fiting a much older utahraptor than herself, she finds herself landed with a new mate, although her sister doesn't like him. As since I can't give the rest of the book away, I recommend that you buy this book and read it on your own if your fascinated by the ancient world of dinosaurs.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Raptor red
Review: Raptor red is an okay book that starts out strong but in the middle it begans to gets undeseriable to read. The middle of the book is a part that you have to keep on reading. On the other hand this book is great at the beganing and end. So if you like to read about dinosaurs go ahead and read your heart out.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not your dry reference book
Review: Raptor Red starts with the human discovery of her kind--the Utahraptor--in Utah fossil beds, and goes on to tell Bakker's imagined tale of how a year in the life of one of these amazing creatures may have been. I found the prose to be very believeable, with a lack of Disneyesque dialogue, but anthropomorphized thoughts in italics to express what may be running through the prehistoric creatures' minds as they did what they did. This technique leads the reader to a "dinosaurian" mindset, as if we really were seeing through a raptor's eyes.

The protagonist is a adult female called Raptor Red, who loses her new mate in a hunt turned tragic. As she struggles to suvive as a lone hunter, she finds her sister, and in the strong bonds of family helps her with her chicks, but the situation gets more complex when a male raptor starts courting Red. There are "friends," such as an old white pteranodon and a small early mammal; there are "foes," the competing hunters in the form of acrocanthosaurs and deinonychus; and there are even disasters to overcome, from floods to injury and disease and the conflict of instincts and interests in the raptor pack.

All in all, this work of fact-based fiction presents a view of dinosaurs as intelligent, adaptable, and capable of emotion, just as we see in wolves, lions, and zebras today. Highly reccommended to paleontology fans who want a break from the dry text of reference books; Raptor Red is a few parts imagination and a few parts fact based on what we know of dinosaurs and what we see in animals today, which makes for a very worthwhile experience.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You don't have to be a scientist
Review: Bakker utilizes precise and thought-provoking details in order to show the reader a world which, until now, has only been hinted at through fossils. His writing style is both informative and entertaining, allowing the average reader with little or no knowledge of paleontology to enjoy this epic tale. Bakker's Utahaptors as well as the other dinosaur characters are three-dimensional and well written throughout the novel. I read "Raptor Red" from beginning to end over night and was amazed by its originality. I wasn't disappointed at all.


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