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Rating: Summary: Gun Shy by Lori L.Lake Review: After being captivated by L.L.Lake's "Ricochet in Time", I went searching for anything else by the same author.My quest was more than rewarded when I found "Gun Shy" This story introduces two characters you'll hold close to your hearts...the tall,brooding Dez Reilly,and the slender,gregarious blonde law student,Jaylynn Savage. Destined to become the epicenter of each other's world,their journey carries the reader through the dangers,excitement,fears and tragedies of their daily tours of duty with the St. Paul police force. As with anything Lori Lake writes, you'll not want this book to end. Good news! she has a sequel to follow this beauty..It's called "Under the Gun" and has our favorite couple again !
Rating: Summary: Never thought I wouldn't rave about a KVF book... Review: After such a long wait for the sequel to Daughters of a Coral Dawn (which I love, including its flaws) I can't believe that this book was a disappointment.It has Forrest's excellent prose, and her ability to create a good plot and really well-defined characters. All of her craft is there. What's missing is heat. Fire, passion -- not in what the characters do and feel, but in the writing itself. The word craft seems so calculating at times that, to my amazement!, I found myself distracted from the story and not really caring about the outcome. As another reviewer said, there is bit of a flaw in the plot, in that the women have such an easy time overcoming every technological barrier. Problem? So-and-so the brilliant this-or-that will find a solution and save the day. And we're told most of this, not shown it. And maybe that is the biggest flaw. The diary entries for the main narrators are very thin on dialogue and action. There's a lot of telling and not much showing. KVF fans will want to read this book, but they should do so with their expectations set to something less than the KVF they expect. Maybe I'm wrong -- it's been nominated for a Lammy -- but for the life of me I can't see why.
Rating: Summary: Worth waiting for ! Review: Although I waited 18 years for the sequel to Daughters of a coral dawn, it was well worth the wait. I could not put this book down and read it in one sitting. Now I know what happened to the ones left behind. Less romantic perhaps that the first book, but eminently readable, as always. The time sequence is a bit confusing at first but stay with it, it all becomes clear.
Rating: Summary: The Story of the Unity continues... Review: Daughters of a Coral Dawn is a romance story set within the context of a science fiction novel. This sequel: Daughters of a Amber Noon is a science fiction novel with a small but, noble love story. If you did not read Daughters of a Coral Dawn I recommend that you do before delving into Amber noon, but it is not necessary --it does stand alone as a viable chapter within a larger story. The reason I recommend the reading of Coral Dawn is the author has set in motion from the middle of Amber Noon an open ended connection back to the original story. And we are rewarded at the end with obvious references that the story of the Unity will continue beyond Amber Noon and perhaps beyond that. My hope is that part three will be a great romance novel (read: Curious Wine or An Emergence of Green) set within a science fiction story as detailed and memorable as Amber Noon and Coral Dawn. And that we don't have to wait so long to read it! As for Amber Noon, Forrest's writing is as fluid as ever and her research evidently exhaustive. I found all the characters compelling, but perhaps the Zed and Desmond characters to be most fully realized. I feel that this may have been the author's intention as well. We are only getting to know Joss and Tara; their time has yet to come. We also hope that Africa, the soul of Amber Noon, will return as well, although that seems unlikely. But, who knows what Master story teller Forrest has in mind for the future of the Unity.
Rating: Summary: Mainstream Writing, Disappointing Read. Review: This was a much anticipated and very disappointing reading experience. Ms. Forrest is an excellent writer, but this latest effort should not be listed as a lesbian novel, nor as a romance. It reminds you of the 50's when a lesbian character is thrown in for attention. If Daughters of an Amber Moon had been the first book, then Daughters of a Corral Dawn would never have had to be written as a sequel because no one would have cared about the other group of women. This is mainstream writing making money posing as lesbian literature. The fact that Ms. Forrest is a lesbian does not make her writing lesbian. In the last few years, her books have become more and more mainstream sanitized. Daughters of an Amber Moon proves once again that you cannot buy a book just by the author's name. Characters are not well developed and no one the reader identifies with or gets close to emotionally. Writing skill is good. Subject and characterization is not. I would not buy this book again, nor recommend it to my friends.
Rating: Summary: IF you loved the first one, read this sequel :) Review: To keep it pretty short and to the point, I'd say that if you loved "Daughters of a Coral Dawn," then you should read "Daughters of an Amber Noon." The sequel - as is so often the case - is not as good as the original ... but it's not bad, either, and if you finished Coral Dawn wanting to know what happens next, you should check this one out. :) Note: The reader from South Carolina appears to have an odd view of what "lesbian" is, though she apparently is one herself. I would agree with the person who said that Amber Noon isn't as lesbian as I would've liked it to have been ... and point out to the reader from South Carolina that having elements such as "all the men were evil" and "all the men were murderers and rapists" does not make a book "more lesbian." Lesbians generally don't hate men - I think you've confused us with married heterosexual women. ;)
Rating: Summary: IF you loved the first one, read this sequel :) Review: To keep it pretty short and to the point, I'd say that if you loved "Daughters of a Coral Dawn," then you should read "Daughters of an Amber Noon." The sequel - as is so often the case - is not as good as the original ... but it's not bad, either, and if you finished Coral Dawn wanting to know what happens next, you should check this one out. :) Note: The reader from South Carolina appears to have an odd view of what "lesbian" is, though she apparently is one herself. I would agree with the person who said that Amber Noon isn't as lesbian as I would've liked it to have been ... and point out to the reader from South Carolina that having elements such as "all the men were evil" and "all the men were murderers and rapists" does not make a book "more lesbian." Lesbians generally don't hate men - I think you've confused us with married heterosexual women. ;)
Rating: Summary: IF you loved the first one, read this sequel :) Review: To keep it pretty short and to the point, I'd say that if you loved "Daughters of a Coral Dawn," then you should read "Daughters of an Amber Noon." The sequel - as is so often the case - is not as good as the original ... but it's not bad, either, and if you finished Coral Dawn wanting to know what happens next, you should check this one out. :) Note: The reader from South Carolina appears to have an odd view of what "lesbian" is, though she apparently is one herself. I would agree with the person who said that Amber Noon isn't as lesbian as I would've liked it to have been ... and point out to the reader from South Carolina that having elements such as "all the men were evil" and "all the men were murderers and rapists" does not make a book "more lesbian." Lesbians generally don't hate men - I think you've confused us with married heterosexual women. ;)
Rating: Summary: Not as good as Coral Dawn - perfunctory and unrefined Review: To the reader who said it wasn't lesbian enough... Huh? Let's see... All the men were evil, completely bereft of any redeeming morality. When they weren't killing and torturing innocents, they were abusing women. All the men hated women. All men were murderers and rapists, and the only man they followed was the one who was more of a murderer than they are. The men who didn't follow him were actually even MORE misogynist than Zed. All the women, on the other hand, were lesbians. All were exceptionally intelligent, moral, and upright, all displayed heroic virtue. All the lesbians were morally and socially superior to men. And all women, when freed from the oppression of men, choose to be lesbians, which is in itself presented as virtuous. And at the end, it is determined that lesbians ARE, in fact, superior to men, proven by the finest minds. Period. Out of curiosity, how much more lesbian did you think it should be? Hmmm. As a lesbian, I have to say - this comment is fairly typical of a certain faction. I think it's the standard gay/lesbian rejoinder, describing an affinity group as "they aren't active (gay, lesbian, feminist, etc.) enough" when you what you mean is, "I'm not getting laid after the meetings like I thought I would." And that's true - if you want the steamy sexual tension and romance of Coral Dawn, with the primary form of artistic expression being erotica and every character's sex life the most important piece of character development, you'll be disappointed. If you want character development at all, you'll be disappointed - she tried to tell two stories in the same word count as Coral Dawn, and did neither well. I found it shallow and rushed, as if she had a certain word count to stay under and had to gloss over the details to make it all fit. The plot was transparent, though the twist at the end was unexpected. The social ideas posited are a ludicrous dystopian fantasy of necessary separatism, ham-handed at best. To be honest, I expected better from Forrest.
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