Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Star Man's Son: 2250 A.D.

Star Man's Son: 2250 A.D.

List Price: $10.50
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Your first is always the most memorable
Review: Like many others before me, it seems that we all read this book while in junior high. I can remember it being on the Scholastic book list that we could choose and order from and it was my first SciFi book ever read. Andre Norton story opened my eyes and I noticed the future for the first time. As a young teenager, life was today and not much thought was given to tomorrow. This book showed me that all kinds of tomorrows could exist. It was an easy and enjoyable read for me. I connected quickly to the main character and his journey into adulthood. Like many others, the book was passed along and never returned. Some 35 plus years later, it still remains number one to me. And it truly, is too good to be out of print. It needs to be out there again for another generation of young adults to discover.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Your first is always the most memorable
Review: Like many others before me, it seems that we all read this book while in junior high. I can remember it being on the Scholastic book list that we could choose and order from and it was my first SciFi book ever read. Andre Norton story opened my eyes and I noticed the future for the first time. As a young teenager, life was today and not much thought was given to tomorrow. This book showed me that all kinds of tomorrows could exist. It was an easy and enjoyable read for me. I connected quickly to the main character and his journey into adulthood. Like many others, the book was passed along and never returned. Some 35 plus years later, it still remains number one to me. And it truly, is too good to be out of print. It needs to be out there again for another generation of young adults to discover.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An exciting post-nuclear war adventure, with human warmth
Review: My attention was first drawn to "Star Man's Son" by a school librarian about 1955, when I was in 8th grade. From then on until I graduated from high school, I read it at least 2 or 3 times a year, probably more, to the point where I could recite whole chapters by heart. The novel is set 200 years after a nuclear war has destroyed "civilization as we know it", as they say. Humankind has reverted to tribes of wanderers, who fear and avoid the old ruined cities for fear of the radiation that has created a race of "beast things". The hero, Fors, has yearned to follow in the footsteps of his later father, a "Star Man," one of the small group that tries to recover the old, lost secrets of science. But Fors is different from the others in his tribe--his night sight and hearing are too keen, and worst of all, his hair to completely white. Out of fear of genetic mutation from the radiation, people like him are not allowed to be full-fledged members of the community. Fors decides to leave the tribe before they decide on his fate. He will make his own way in the world. In the course of his adventures, he encounters and befriends a wounded man whose skin is as black as Fors's is white; they penetrate one of the old cities, and survive, though they have some narrow escapes from the Beast Things. Fors and his friend must both prove their valor and worth to their respective tribes--white and black--which are suspicious of one another, and join them to fight the Beast Things, which have become bolder and are beginning to emerge from the cities. As an adolescent, I empathized utterly with Fors, and I repeated envisioned myself as the hero of a film version of this exciting novel. I lost my copy somewhere long ago, and I've tried to find it again to lend to young friends who would enjoy it as much as I did 40 years ago. Any young man who feels misunderstood and put upon by family and the world at large will share in the excitement of Fors' adventures and his final success. I've read quite a few other Andre Norton stories, but this one, to me, was always the VERY best. I wish it were back in print!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my childhood favorites!
Review: Son of a gun, I just happened to think of this book one day and typed it in just for fun - and there are other reviews - and the reviews are good! I read a chapter from this many many years ago a middle school English class (required reading) and thought this story rocks! A story of after the apocalypse , primitive tribe living around Noo York City! This was a super book, I wish they would reprint it, it would make a good "Twilight Zone" or "Star Trek" type TV movie. I never did read the whold book, though, don't know how it ends - on an uplifting and hopeful note, I'm sure!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If you thought the paperback version was good....
Review: The first and most vivid work of a fine writer of imaginative adventure stories. If you liked the paperback, try and locate a copy of the original hardback. It had illustrations by Nicholas Mordvinoff which were as good as the novel itself. His drawings of the Beast Things really brings them to life. Brrrrr!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If you thought the paperback version was good....
Review: The first and most vivid work of a fine writer of imaginative adventure stories. If you liked the paperback, try and locate a copy of the original hardback. It had illustrations by Nicholas Mordvinoff which were as good as the novel itself. His drawings of the Beast Things really brings them to life. Brrrrr!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I can only echo what others have already said!
Review: This is a book that I read in the early '70's, my brother had bought it from the book order at school. I only read it once and have never forgotten it. It was so well written and appealed to me and my friends at the time. I'm going to try and find a copy too!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My first Andre Norton but not my last
Review: This is the first Andre Norton book that I read. My cousin had it and when we visited them I spent the whole time with me nose in the book. Got me in a lot of trouble but I never regretted it. That was about 40 years ago but it doesn't seem that long. Andre Norton has given me lots of new heros and heroines but none has ever replaced this one. He was basically cast out of his clan, decided to show them that he was worthwhile, met the baddies, saved a stranger, fought with the strangers tribe against the baddies, and saved the world. What more can you want in an action adventure? It also has an Andre Norton cat. It's one of her best.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unbelievable
Review: This is uncanny! I feel like I'm in a chat room with all the other reviewers! I too read this book in the 7th-8th grade (way too many years ago) and the story has never left me. Unfortunately for me, my copy (titled "Daybreak 2250 A.D.") was sold in an auction in a box of books that I intended to keep! This is one of the most engrossing stories that I have ever read, even if it was meant for kids. If you can find a copy, buy it, treasure it, and share it with your children. A great book

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The dream of the Star Men shall never die!
Review: This was one of the first science fiction novels that I ever read, and the ideas and images in it have stayed with me all this time. Nor is it really "dated", it could all still happen- only it is now 250 years into the future instead of 300.

This is the story of Lars of the Puma clan, of the people of the Smoking Mountains. Lars's father was of the famed Star Men- explorers of the blasted wilderness beyond the mountain stronghold of the Star Hall. The brotherhood of Star Men sought to carry on the tradition of their research scientist ancestors- to seek out new knowledge for the betterment of the tribe- and of the world. This was to be Lars's destiny also, except that his father failed to return from his last mission and there was no one to speak for him at the last choosing of apprentices. So, rather than accept the insult of a lesser life, Lars took up his sword, bow, and his father's pouch, and along with his great mutant hunting cat, Lura, went out to find the great lost city of the Old Ones that his father's last journal entry spoke of.

Published in 1952 this was one of the first post-apocalyptic novels. It is also one of the most believable. Even in light of current knowledge you still find it believable.

One other thing, in spite of the tales about the unimaginable horror of nuclear war, this book was about hope. You see, even after you press that big "reset" button, mankind will yet find a way to survive; the great cycle of re-civilization from the ruins of former greatness will start again. If you were a kid growing up during the Cold War this was an important message to keep at the back of your mind.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates