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Stars over Stars

Stars over Stars

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hrinn uber alles
Review: Aliens are usually giant bears with human personalities...or giant cockroaches with human personalities, or giant somethingorothers with human personalities. In Black On Black and Stars over Stars, Kathy Wentworth has done something that few SF writers can: she creates two races of highly believable aliens, the Hrinn and the Flek...and she explores the issues of the differences in the minds of humans and aliens. Using Heyoka Blackeagle, the ultimate outsider, the Black on Black of Hrinn legend, who is raised as a Sioux warrior, and Mitsu, the human who is transformed against her will into a Flek hivemember, she explores what it is like to be human...and what it is like to be "other." The Hrinn are neither giant wolves or giant bears or giant wolverines...they are simply Hrinn. Their culture and their personalities are clearly and carefully drawn. So are the Flek, which Wentworth transforms from a faceless and remorseless enemy into a people, worthy of protection and defense. This is a great read, as well as a deep well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hrinn uber alles
Review: Aliens are usually giant bears with human personalities...or giant cockroaches with human personalities, or giant somethingorothers with human personalities. In Black On Black and Stars over Stars, Kathy Wentworth has done something that few SF writers can: she creates two races of highly believable aliens, the Hrinn and the Flek...and she explores the issues of the differences in the minds of humans and aliens. Using Heyoka Blackeagle, the ultimate outsider, the Black on Black of Hrinn legend, who is raised as a Sioux warrior, and Mitsu, the human who is transformed against her will into a Flek hivemember, she explores what it is like to be human...and what it is like to be "other." The Hrinn are neither giant wolves or giant bears or giant wolverines...they are simply Hrinn. Their culture and their personalities are clearly and carefully drawn. So are the Flek, which Wentworth transforms from a faceless and remorseless enemy into a people, worthy of protection and defense. This is a great read, as well as a deep well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: really awesome!
Review: Having read K.D Wentworth's BLACK ON BLACK, I kniew what to expect -- somewhat. This time she focuses on three alien species, not counting the humans, and brings them all off well. She has the ability to make the reader care about even minor characters. The story is pretty traditional SF again, which is not my preferred reading, but Wentworth's book kept me up late at night after I should've gone to sleep "just gotta finish this/the next chapter." While not perfect, this is a very good read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another Good Traditional SF Novel
Review: Having read K.D Wentworth's BLACK ON BLACK, I kniew what to expect -- somewhat. This time she focuses on three alien species, not counting the humans, and brings them all off well. She has the ability to make the reader care about even minor characters. The story is pretty traditional SF again, which is not my preferred reading, but Wentworth's book kept me up late at night after I should've gone to sleep "just gotta finish this/the next chapter." While not perfect, this is a very good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: really awesome!
Review: i picked up Heinlen's "Citizen of the Galaxy" in a bookstore and considered buying it until i started flipping through; and was almost immediately turned off by both the first person point of view and the dry formula. maybe i need to go back and try again, but don't know about all those ppl who keep comparing this book to that.
the story was awesome, but the plot's already been extensively laid out by several thoughtful people, so i get to skip it and comment. :)
really well done! Liked it alot, and that's saying something - i started to run out of things to read, and have been searching desperately ever since seventh grade. i'm in high school now, and i really enjoy this book and was glad that i found it. unfortunately, lack of a credit-card, birthday or other holiday which results in gift-cards has prevented me from getting my hands on the first one (a repeating mojo for me) and i would appreciate if amazon.com could put one of those cool "Look Inside" things on the first book so i could have a sneak peak.
this book was great; don't be afraid to take the advice of us ppl putting it out there on the post-it, i know i was but i don't regret getting this book, and it's been almost a year since i bought it.
it's an awesome story that keeps you hooked till the end, with lots of interactions and different points of view to spice it all up, esp. with a couple of action scenes and a small surprise for all of you who kept up with the first book and were worried about Heyoka's . . . condition.
a small plea to the author - i noted the dates for publication from your first book to the second . . . will we have to wait till 2003 for the next one? (PS - personally, i don't mind waiting if it's an issue of quality) just curious. thanks for reading, and if you want a plot summary, scroll back up.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Masterful military SF with extra kick
Review: It is no accident that K. D. Wentworth is a multiple Nebula® Award nominee.

In other hands, STARS OVER STARS, the second installment in the Heyoka Blackeagle saga, could be just what a surface reading suggests: an exemplary example of a military sf novel. In Wentworth's hands, however, STARS OVER STARS becomes much more than a straightforward non-stop action adventure. Layered into the straightforward oft-told tale of a group of military trainees learning to work as a team are two major themes Wentworth deftly explores.

The book opens with Heyoka trying to train the first Ranger recruits from Heyoka's native planet. The new recruits, like Heyoka, are Hrinn, seven-foot tall furry wolf-like aliens. Unlike Heyoka, they were not raised in Human society and so are having difficulty adapting to Human standards and customs. Wentworth masterfully plumbs the social dynamics of the canine-like pack society of the Hrinn. Other authors might have stopped with this wonderful accomplishment, but Wentworth uses it as just the wedge to pry open the real themes of the book.

Beginning with the struggle of the rebellious Hrinn recruit Kei, and continuing with the inner anguish of the Human Ranger, Mitsu, Wentworth explores the twin themes of self-identity and where that identity fits within the larger social group. Wentworth never preaches it, never blatantly hits the reader over the head with it, never for one second stops the seesaw planetary battle, but each character in the book goes through the struggle to find self and to find one's place in the larger group: Kei; Mitsu; Heyoka himself; the treacherous Skal; the priestly Visht; the cull Kika with her secret. Even the gentle insectoid Laka and evil Flek characters go through this inner journey: Fourth Translator and Second Breeder, World Architect 459--no character is immune. Even whole societies must face the change these questions bring.

STARS OVER STARS offers its readers what a good military sf novel should: carefully crafted alien cultures, detailed small-unit tactics, an endorphin-draining frenetic plot. Yet, with Wentworth's buried twin themes, STARS OVER STARS has a resonating depth to it that gives its readers that extra kick only a great novel can give.

Whether as a standalone or as the sequel to BLACK/OVER/BLACK, read K. D. Wentworth's new STARS OVER STARS.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Loupy Tale
Review: K.D. Wentworth's fast-paced (and beautifully written) "Stars over Stars" has to be one of the weirdest, and yet most fascinating, contributions to the "military" science-fiction subgenre.

A sequel to "Black on Black," it contains a veritable cornucopia of whacked out humans and aliens. The fun starts before you even open the book. Look at Patrick Turner's brilliant cover, which shows a wolf-like biped (Wentworth describes the critters as wolf-bear-cat combos, but never mind), clearly male, looking over his shoulder at a tiny human woman, who looks as if she'd rather be anywhere else than where she is (they're framed against a background of crystals--you'll soon learn why) while toting so many guns and ammo that it's unlikely she'd have a chance to use any of it before being toppled over by anything incoming. And she seems quite aware of this. "What am I doing here, with this big bad critter?" she seems to be asking. (And maybe you will be too.)

The lupine is Heyoka Blackeagle, a member of the race of Hrinn who have definite issues dealing with authority figures and chains of command (they're used to solving disputes the way Earth's wolves do), who serves as a sergeant in the human-led intergalactic ranger corps, and the woman is Mitsu Jensen, his corporal. Jensen has just recovered from having been brainwashed by the insectoid race known as the Flek (the story told in "Black on Black"), and the still unstable woman thinks she sees them everywhere. But they've abandoned this planet, which is now occupied by the peaceful Laka (who also seemingly have all sorts of mental problems). The possibly still-addled Jensen seems unable or unwilling to tell the difference between Laka and Flek.

And then, just when Heyoka and all the other members of the platoon are convinced Mitsu's brain is indeed seriously fried--yep, here come the Flek themselves. And then things really go bananas, as the tale tumbles on in a multiple POV fashion (all the significant characters get at least one turn at bat). The details of the tumultuous efforts to keep the planet Flek-free will not be divulged here. See for yourself.

A great piece of work. More please!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Masterful military SF with extra kick
Review: Oh, wow.

That seems a little inadequate for a book which kept me up past midnight just to finish it. Kathy Wentworth has a real gift for bringing situations and people to life, including even the sketch-glimpses we get of the flek, and the color-sketch of the Laka.

I really liked the development of character in this book. Blackeagle and Mitsu both overcome major limitations in their mind-sets and grow to meet new challenges, and I had a lot of fun following the ways events kept backfiring on the flek. Even the minor characters such as Kei were worth knowing, and it was fun watching each of them deal with the mess into which they were pitched.

About the only negative comment I have is that the cover isn't nearly as good as the one for "Black/On/Black", which was much more evocative. This cover is truer to the content of the story, but definitely not as much of a sales point. I bought the dead tree "B/O/B" on the basis of the cover alone, then got blown away by the story in that book. You don't, by the way, have to have read the first book in order to follow this one, but you'll have a lot of fun if you do.

I sincerely hope this won't be the last we see of the *Avalanche/In/Motion* pattern that are Heyoga Blackeagle and Mitsu.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: *Avalanche/In/Motion*
Review: Oh, wow.

That seems a little inadequate for a book which kept me up past midnight just to finish it. Kathy Wentworth has a real gift for bringing situations and people to life, including even the sketch-glimpses we get of the flek, and the color-sketch of the Laka.

I really liked the development of character in this book. Blackeagle and Mitsu both overcome major limitations in their mind-sets and grow to meet new challenges, and I had a lot of fun following the ways events kept backfiring on the flek. Even the minor characters such as Kei were worth knowing, and it was fun watching each of them deal with the mess into which they were pitched.

About the only negative comment I have is that the cover isn't nearly as good as the one for "Black/On/Black", which was much more evocative. This cover is truer to the content of the story, but definitely not as much of a sales point. I bought the dead tree "B/O/B" on the basis of the cover alone, then got blown away by the story in that book. You don't, by the way, have to have read the first book in order to follow this one, but you'll have a lot of fun if you do.

I sincerely hope this won't be the last we see of the *Avalanche/In/Motion* pattern that are Heyoga Blackeagle and Mitsu.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Misfits prove their worth
Review: On the planet Oleaaka, Ranger Sgt. Heyoka Blackeagle, a lupinoid hrinn who was raised in the Restored Oglala Nation on Earth, is struggling to make a going concern of the first integrated human-hrinn Ranger unit. The hrinn are fierce fighters, but they have absolutely no concept of chain of command and hate sitting around and waiting to get in on the fight they've been promised against the insectoid flek. Heyoka's second and longtime partner, Cpl. Mitsu Jensen, is still recovering from the brainwashing she endured as a flek POW. And Oleaaka has what everyone assumes to be a native species of its own, the laka, who supposedly--nobody yet understands how--drove the flek off 48 years ago. Entirely by accident, the Ranger unit discovers a hidden flek transport station, and everything starts going downhill from there. As has been mentioned by other reviewers, the multiple pov's may be a bit hard to follow--we get the chance to see through the eyes of just about everyone, from Heyoka and his kinsman Kei to assorted laka. But what makes the book work, like its predecessor, is Wentworth's amazing ability to put herself into the skins and minds of her nonhuman characters and portray them as true aliens, with their own cultures, concerns, and convoluted ways of thinking. In the end there's an opening left for yet another book in the series, as Heyoka's unit literally saves the day (it's been two years since the book was published; I can only hope that the author is putting the finishing touches on the final conquest of the flek!). Of course, I knew very early on that Heyoka was going about his program the wrong way, but given his raising that may be inevitable, and at least he realizes eventually that he can't, and shouldn't try to, make hrinn into carbon copies of humans. At the same time, his weirdly assorted group wouldn't survive if it hadn't had *all* the beings in it that it does; each plays an important role in the final triumph. Excellent military sf and a vivid portrayal of an alien, yet ultimately comprehensible, people.


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