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Rating: Summary: In/Out of this world! Review: Blending ancient myths and her own cleverly crafted ideas of Atlantean society, Judith McWilliam's The Man From Atlantis was enthralling from cover to cover! The relationship between the main characters was well developed, the "bad guy" was allowed a round, human personality, and the scenes were vivid and imaginative. In the Man From Atlantis, McWilliams blends science fiction elements with romance and passion into a surprisingly realistic novel.
Rating: Summary: Skip it Review: There aren't many books that manage to suck in two genres, but "The Man From Atlantis" fails as a romance and it fails as a science fiction story. I'm not really surprised, whenever Silhouette authors (or any series romance authors) make an attempt to write sci fi the results are usually spectacularly bad, but usually I'm able to gloss over the crappy parts and enjoy the relationship, but not in this case.Kynan is completely unappealing. I realize that he's been thrown into what he sees as a strange and barbaric world, but he comes off like an arrogant prick. Let all of us primitive people bow before your superiority, you god of a man. Bleh. The heroine, Jenna, is okay but she's really, really vanilla. After I was done reading the book I couldn't remember a single thing that she had done or said. She was that dull. I won't spoil the ending for whoever might be bored enough to read this (as if it's possible to spoil something this bad. Reading it is like trying to drink milk that has turned) but Kynan will be faced with a choice: leave Earth to be with his people or stay with Jenna. By the last chapter I was ready to bankroll the mission myself. Get the hell off our planet you bastard, and stay off!
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