Tag: reviews

The centre of the universe likes Marseguro & Terra Insegura!

OK, I should probably explain that the centre of the universe is a blog. The blogger, who goes by the handle Cenobyte, writes, in part: There is just enough nerd factor in these books to make them sciencey, and there is just enough of a fabulous story to make them fictioney. In fact, both of …

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A new review of Terra Insegura…

…showed up today on the LiveJournal My Den. After a brief description of the plot, the blogger writes: But once on Earth, several things become apparent. Richard has the tactical skills of a tomato plant, the alternately revered and despised Victor Hansen turns out to have had a lot of skeletons in his closet and …

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A nice new review of Marseguro

Cranking Plot posts a nice “reader’s review” of Marseguro today, with a second “writer’s review” promised for later. Calling it a “richly realized” story (though he would have liked more depth to the characterization), the reviewer writes: Marseguro has a strong plot, well developed society and believable technology….Edward Willett has crafted an excellent plot-driven story …

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The catch-all post: recent reviews and other bits

You may have noticed that blogging pretty much dried up after WorldCon. Heavy-duty vacationing will do that to you. And now that I’m back home I’m so completely snowed under by things that need doing that blogging generally falls pretty far down the list. Heck, I’m barely managing a Tweet now and then. Still, I’ve …

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A couple of nice reviews on Good Reads…

…for Marseguro and Terra Insegura have showed up from Bookchick, host of the all-about-books radio program I was recently on on Regina’s CJTR community radio station. Highlights of the Marseguro review*: Marseguro is an action-packed adventure full of humour, characters who are familiar as soon as they’re introduced, and a sense of urgency that doesn’t …

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Two new reviews of Terra Insegura…

…recently popped up. The first is from arch thinking. Choice bits: “…Terra Insegura stands on its own very well…a real action-packed science fiction novel….Anyone who likes their science fiction fast and well-written will enjoy Terra Insegura.” The second I particularly like, because it’s from a 17-year-old reader at Flamingnet.com, which offers young people the opportunity to …

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Errant Dreams gives Terra Insegura four out of five stars

A new review of Terra Insegura popped up today at the Errant Dreams blog, and it’s a pretty good one–four out of five stars. A couple of excerpts: Edward Willett’s Terra Insegura is a sequel to his Marseguro. As happens all-too-often with reviewing, I haven’t read that previous book. However, that does make me eminently qualified to …

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A nice review of Marseguro…

…showed up today on the blog arch thinking. While she had some criticisms, it’s generally a good one. Some highlights: …Willett really shines at world-building. He brought Marseguro (the planet) to life for me and I enjoyed getting to know Earth of the Body Purified (which reminded me of Heinlein’s religious dictatorship of “If This …

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A mini-review of Marseguro…

…has shown up at the blog Strategist’s Personal Library. Here’s the most important bit: All of the characters here have well thought out motivations and there’s excellent characterization. I liked that even the protagonists are flawed in some way. This isn’t black vs. white there are shades of gray. Lots of ethical decisions to be made …

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“Great space opera of the extra-pulpy variety”

That’s how Michael H. Payne sums up Marseguro and Terra Insegura. About the latter, he specifically has this to say: This one has a few more “snags” than the first book–some places where the plot machinery creaked a bit and where the characters acted to further the story rather than in a way anyone in …

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Book review: Defining Diana by Hayden Trenholm

Defining Diana by Ottawa author Hayden Trenholm, published by Bundoran Press, is a near-future police procedural, a combination of mystery and science fiction that I personally find irresistible if it’s done well–and Defining Diana is definitely done well. I’ll let the back cover copy handle the set-up: Found naked and alone in a locked room, the …

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Good review of Terra Insegura at SF Scope

There’s a very nice review of Terra Insegura by Ian Randal Strock at SF Scope. It begins: A little bleaker, a little less “gosh-wow” sensawunda (due to familiarity), a lot closer to home, Terra Insegura is the perfect balance to Marseguro: you’ve got to read this one if you read the first. It does stand …

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