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Crossing the Line

Crossing the Line

List Price: $7.50
Your Price: $6.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 7 stars would be about right.
Review: Almost flawless. My only quibble is that Aras becomes too human too fast, so much so that Shan is tougher than the Monster of Mjat. That doesn't ring true. It's all part of making Shan bigger than life -- MUCH bigger than life. It's epic and emotionally satisfying, I admit, but overdone.

It's still an awesome book, though. I can't wait to read more of Shan's adventures!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A second novel in a trilogy that doesn't disappoint
Review: CROSSING THE LINE continues the compelling story of Shan Frankland and the alien soldier Aras she met at Cavanagh's Star. Tensions mount between humans and the aliens they encountered there, as various factions vie to get Aras's parasite, which renders its host unkillable and immortal. As before, Shan is wonderfully realized, a pragmatic law enforcer who finds herself increasingly estranged from the human world as she becomes closer to Aras's culture. While there is a romantic element to this, this would never be mistaken for a Regency bodice-ripper: she is among non-humans and her relationship to Aras, while physical (discretely described) is more the intimacy achieved between battlefield comrades. Lest the romance-phobic reject this, there is more than enough military detail, alien ecology, and intrigue to overwhelm a lesser novel. While enough information is provided to understand the action, it would be best to start with the first novel CITY OF PEARL. Then enjoy this book... and suffer through the months until the third concluding novel is published.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An amazing follow-up & a writer to watch
Review: CROSSING THE LINE is the latest in her Wess'har Wars universe and is the follow-up to her first book CITY OF PEARL which was published in early 2004.

Though it forms the middle of a trilogy the book stands well enough on its own as we are once again introduced to characters from the first book such as Environmental Enforcement Officer Shan Frankland, a disturbingly complicated protagonist whose past gets a deeper look in this sequel.

Aras, an alien of the Wess'har who has been infected with a bioweapon that has made him a near immortal warrior for the wess'har, and a subject of embarrassment now that the war he fought is long over, also returns.

Traviss deftly weaves a series of plots together while touching on matters of spirituality, government, ecology, sociology, and ethics. Traviss' first obligation seems to be to the plot, her second to the characters, and she leaves her soapbox at home in favor of spinning an entertaining read.

The action takes place on the world of Cavanagh's Star, sight of the war which saw Aras destroy the settlers from the alien Isenj race and wipe their cities from the planet when they threatened the ecological balance of the world's native sea dwelling and technically unadvanced sentient race.

This time the story concerns itself with the subject of the title as the main characters are forced to consider and cross moral and ethical lines as human settlers and military reach the colony world of Cavanagh's Star.

Yet Traviss doesn't dwell on those decisions, instead she pushes on and tells her story, leaving the reader to try to piece together any deeper meaning. Though her novels have been compared to Le Guin's thanks to her ecological slant, the universe that Traviss writes is a pragmatist's one and her characters range the full spectrum leaving no clear heroes or villains.

Just as we begin to get a feel for Shan Frankland, her past as a police officer and the violent means she employed to achieve her ends are revealed. The stoic Aras, who suffered horribly at the hands of the Isenj as a POW and who through the middle of the book seems more human in his thoughts and feelings then Shan, is revealed as the alien he is in mind and body when he is confronted with a threat to the ecology of the world he is charged with protecting.

While readers looking for a more literary style of writing ala Le Guin or a dose of the New Weird as delivered by Charles Stross or China Mieville may be disappointed by Traviss' straightforward prose style, there is a depth to her work in the strength of her story and characters.

CROSSING THE LINE stands on its own but is best read as part of the series which wraps up with next year's THE WORLD BEFORE. Readers can also catch up with Traviss in her Star Wars novel REPUBLIC COMMANDO: HARD CONTACT out now.



Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Gritty Top Cop or Tree-huggin Human Hater?
Review: CROSSING THE LINE takes off where CITY OF PEARL started, with gritty top cop Shan Frankland, who worked with the elite Envro Corps back on Earth. Now she has teamed up with a new partner, who happens to be an alien infected with a parasitic life form, which gives the host eternal life. The characters are well developed, the plot is fast paced and it will leave you looking forward to the next book. However, I did find it tedious at times, was Karen Traviss telling us an great story, or was she making a political statement? Shan Frankland seems to be the only Human who knows the TRUTH; the human race's only desire is to cut down the trees for profit and skin all the bunny rabbits for coats, and no one can see the damage that they do except Shan, and now she is going to kill us all to save the apes. Hopefully the next chapter will find Earth has intellegent people, who are not fanatics, that can turn this mess around..

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Geo/alien/bio-pharm/military/political intrigue galore!
Review: Deft. Bold. Confident. All descriptions that describe the main character of this series, Inspector Shan Frankland, and the growing ability of its author, Karen Traviss. Between this hard action, brilliantly complex and exquisitely detailed world of a not all that distant future, and Traviss' other new novel of a group of special forces warriors in the Star Wars universe, the bar has been raised for techno-thriller sci fi. I've read other reviews of Traviss that wax poetic about her Ursula K. LeGuinn tendencies and depth of emotional range, but for me, its her amazing sense of realism when dealing with political and military matters that has me already impatient for the next book!

Karen Traviss is definitely a new, strong voice in the world of sci fi.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellent followup
Review: Karen Traviss's previous title, City of Pearl, was but a prelude to Crossing the Line in many ways. That's not to say that the book doesn't stand alone--it can, I believe--but Crossing the Line takes some of the plots and themes established in the first volume and explores them further.

The line in the title is both physical and metaphorical: how far will you go to acquire for king and country? How far will you go to defend yourself and your people? These questions are what the book's plot revolves around, inspired by the loose thread left dangling at the end of City of Pearl.

Traviss manages to stay fairly agnostic in her presentation; each side in the various conflicts is given a fair shake, and for the most part no side is presented as inherently more rational or moral than another. This lends a degree of credibility even to those parties I didn't agree with, and helps to make the conflicts more believable.

As before, we are given aliens who are more than reshaped humans. This is one of Traviss's strong suits: creating understandable-yet-alien cultures and behaviors. A key part of both of her books, it is these aliens that are at the heart of the books, as they--not the reactionary humans--are really the ones driving the plots. It is they who make this book shine, and make the book stand out from the rest of the pack.

Though the ending of Crossing the Line will leave the reader waiting for the next installment, it's simply another iteration of how nothing ever ends neatly--the basic premise of the book, in a way, as Crossing the Line's plot started as cleanup on City of Pearl's hanging plot thread. I have no qualms in saying that Crossing the Line is an excellent read from an author whose work is worth seeking out.


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