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Rating: Summary: The Best Review: I'd never read anything by Holly Lisle alone before, only collaborations (The Rose Sea, Serrated Edge books), and I wasn't sure what to expect. I was blown away - this book is terrific! I have to read more of her stuff. Since I read Laurell K. Hamilton's Nightseer, I particularly think this book should appeal to her many readers: it's fast-paced, funny, and scary as hell.
Rating: Summary: An excellent piece of work Review: This is an outstanding piece of writing for somebody who has never written SciFi before. The technology is plausible, the world-building excellent (and there's a lot of it too), and the characters seem like a logical extension of their environment.The only reason I can't give it a five star is that she goes a little too over-the-top at the end of the book for good logical reasons. Confused? Read the book and you'll understand what I mean. I hope that Ms. Lisle continues to write SciFi as I thoroughly believe that she will become even better in time.
Rating: Summary: An excellent piece of work Review: This is an outstanding piece of writing for somebody who has never written SciFi before. The technology is plausible, the world-building excellent (and there's a lot of it too), and the characters seem like a logical extension of their environment. The only reason I can't give it a five star is that she goes a little too over-the-top at the end of the book for good logical reasons. Confused? Read the book and you'll understand what I mean. I hope that Ms. Lisle continues to write SciFi as I thoroughly believe that she will become even better in time.
Rating: Summary: Compulsively readable Review: With HUNTING THE CORRIGAN'S BLOOD, acclaimed fantasy novelist Holly Lisle makes her first foray into the treacherous waters of science fiction. And in this novel, those waters are treacherous indeed. As is common is Ms. Lisle's books, we feel that there is much more to the setting than just the glimpses we are getting as Cadence Drake speeds through them in search of the missing ship, Corrigan's Blood. Her world-building has always provided Lisle's work with a sense of depth that makes it almost impossible for the reader NOT to suspend their disbelief. But in CORRIGAN'S BLOOD, the background feels even deeper than in her Arhel novels, and the reader has the sense that the author is not yet finished with this setting. Yet in many ways this novel, despite the trappings of hard SF, is more of a thriller. It has the headlong pace, compulsive readability, and enormous stakes that characterize the best of thrillers. Lisle's novels have always had their dark side, but HUNTING THE CORRIGAN'S BLOOD doesn't seem to have any other side. Her prose is leaner, cut closer to the bone than is her usual wont, and yet perfectly appropriate in a novel that hurtles towards the denouement at a pace that would require an origami drive to achieve. I found myself literally unable to put the book down, walking into things as I read on my way from room to room. Though the almost-inevitable ending of this first volume was less than perfectly satisfying, if Lisle can bring the same emotional intensity and driving pace to future works in this milieu, one can hardly imagine that Cadence Drake's future adventures would fail to meet with increasing success. It's a crime to see a book this good go out of print so quickly, but this one is well worth the time and effort to hunt down a copy -- you will not be disappointed. One can only hope that Ms. Lisle's new publisher will take an interest in Cadence Drake's escapades, and give them a better home than Baen did.
Rating: Summary: Compulsively readable Review: With HUNTING THE CORRIGAN'S BLOOD, acclaimed fantasy novelist Holly Lisle makes her first foray into the treacherous waters of science fiction. And in this novel, those waters are treacherous indeed. As is common is Ms. Lisle's books, we feel that there is much more to the setting than just the glimpses we are getting as Cadence Drake speeds through them in search of the missing ship, Corrigan's Blood. Her world-building has always provided Lisle's work with a sense of depth that makes it almost impossible for the reader NOT to suspend their disbelief. But in CORRIGAN'S BLOOD, the background feels even deeper than in her Arhel novels, and the reader has the sense that the author is not yet finished with this setting. Yet in many ways this novel, despite the trappings of hard SF, is more of a thriller. It has the headlong pace, compulsive readability, and enormous stakes that characterize the best of thrillers. Lisle's novels have always had their dark side, but HUNTING THE CORRIGAN'S BLOOD doesn't seem to have any other side. Her prose is leaner, cut closer to the bone than is her usual wont, and yet perfectly appropriate in a novel that hurtles towards the denouement at a pace that would require an origami drive to achieve. I found myself literally unable to put the book down, walking into things as I read on my way from room to room. Though the almost-inevitable ending of this first volume was less than perfectly satisfying, if Lisle can bring the same emotional intensity and driving pace to future works in this milieu, one can hardly imagine that Cadence Drake's future adventures would fail to meet with increasing success. It's a crime to see a book this good go out of print so quickly, but this one is well worth the time and effort to hunt down a copy -- you will not be disappointed. One can only hope that Ms. Lisle's new publisher will take an interest in Cadence Drake's escapades, and give them a better home than Baen did.
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