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1. The Vulcan Academy Murders (Star Trek) by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1987)
Asin: B001U0XV78 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (15)
The Vulcan are interesting, Kirk is an idiot
I liked this one a lot
Anyone can figure out the killer very quickly... but it is still a fun ride. 3 1/2 Stars
A great book
A 'cozy' Vulcan story |
2. Metamorphosis by Jean Lorrah | |
Unknown Binding:
Pages
(1990)
Asin: B0041RHZ3S Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (15)
Didn't Have to be So Long...
STNG - Metamorphosis - A compelling story! The premise: The Enterprise is called to the planet Elysia when it starts to experience unexplained gravitational disturbances.Captain Picard quite fatefully assigns primary control of the mission to Lieutenant Commander Data who sets out to accomplish the mission.While on the mission he meets an Elysian named Thelia who believes that Data has been sent by the Gods to help her on her quest and in helping her do so, he meets these "Gods" who grant him the one thing he's not capable of doing himself; they make him human. What follows from there is an intriguing and compelling story that at times doesn't quite live up to what the reader might expect but still carries the story along rather well.Overall, this was a good first "novel" for the Star Trek The Next Generation series and sadly, the last visit into this "universe" by its author.Hopefully in the future, she will come back as some of the authors who disappeared from the rolls have. I would definitely recommend this early STNG novel to any and all fans, casual or die hard alike.{ssintrepid}
It had to happen sometime . . .
Data finally gets to be a real boy The Enterprise is studying unexplained gravitational disturbances on the planet Elysia.On the planet's surface Data meets a young woman named Thelia who thinks the android has been sent by the gods to accompany her on her quest.Data believes these "gods" might be the legendary Preservers and the pair proceeds on the quest together.To Data's surprise, whatever the Elysian gods are they grant his fondest desire and turn him into a human being.When he returns to the Enterprise and is immediately accosted by security guards demanding to know what has happened to Commander Data. "Metamorphosis" takes place during the show's second season (obviously, since Katharine Pulaski is the ship's doctor), and takes place after "The Measure of a Man," the episode where Data has to defend his right to exist in a Starfleet court.The set-up is a tad on the mystical side, but Lorrah is on firmer ground in detailing the actual consequences of Data no longer being an android.I loved the irony that Pulaski, who has always been the one who treated Data least like he was human, is the only one who recognizes that Data looks exactly like he would if he was human.I do not think any one reading this book will be surprised that in the end Data discovers being human is not all he thought it would be, but this simply speaks to how on target Lorrah is in this novel.For fans of Data, this is certainly the STNG novel that should be first on their list for tracking down and checking out.
The sequal to Survivors ST-TNG #4 |
3. Blood Will Tell by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback: 270
Pages
(2007-04-27)
list price: US$15.99 -- used & new: US$11.50 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 143440076X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description "In Blood Will Tell, Jean Lorrah creates an intriguing blend of police procedural, science fiction, and romance with a heroine as strong and appealing as Clarice Starling in Silence of the Lambs. Comparable to the vampire mysteries of P. N. Elrod and Tanya Huff, this novel is a must-read for the discriminating fan."--Margaret L. Carter, Author, The Vampire in Literature "...Blood Will Tell is the best read I've had in several months.... When I finished it, I wandered around my house from stack to stack of books disconsolately looking for another book that good. There wasn't one. I wish every book on the stands was this satisfying, this exciting and profound. Customer Reviews (13)
Some good ideas, but skipable
I really wanted to like this book...but I didn't.
Hang in there
One of the worst books I've ever read
AuthorZone.Com Book Review Brandy engages the help of Dr. Dan Martin one of the school's professors in the Computer Science department. The pair determine Professor Land assumed a new identity some thirty or so years ago after he had reached his sixties under his previous name. Brandy is dumbfounded when the police chief declares the case closed and tells Brandy to get back to her other cases. As Dr. Martin and Brandy develop a caring relationship she is convinced there is more to her loved one than is apparent. As time goes on Brandy begins to know for certain that Dr. Martin is not your average college professor. Blood Will Tell is a page turner daring to take what is accepted lore regarding vampires and turn that cliché inside out. Writer Lorrah presents a well crafted work filled with good writing, fiduciary situations and characters, thought provoking situation and stimulating dialogue. Blood Will Tell is an appealing amalgam of romance, science fiction, and police procedure in which solidly punctilious main characters exhibit great strength of character in the face of impossible situation. Blood Will Tell stands in the class of P.N. Elrod's vampire mysteries. Writer Lorrah sets the stage for excitement from the opening paragraph then carries the reader on a roller coaster of excitement right to the last page. Blood Will Tell is not a narrative for a dark stormy night alone when the lights are flickering and the reader is home alone. Reviewed by: molly martin ... Read more |
4. Survivors (Star Trek The Next Generation, No 4) by Jean Lorrah | |
Mass Market Paperback: 253
Pages
(1991-03-15)
list price: US$5.50 -- used & new: US$8.82 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671742906 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Data and Lt. Tasha Yar are dispatched to investigate. Once they reach Treva, they discover the truth, and any possible solution may be far more complex than a simple rebellion.Treva's president wants more then Starfleet's good words in her fight against the rebels, she wants their weapons technology. Customer Reviews (13)
Great book!
Captivating This is a touching, emotional must-read for any Data or Tasha fans. Tasha/Data shippers unite!
STNG #4 - Survivors - A superb early STNG novel! The premise: As this was written very early in the television series, the author picked up well on the dynamic interpersonal relationship between Commander Data and Lieutenant Tasha Yar.In doing so, she put these two characters in the midst of away mission on their own, dropping them off on a human colony known as Treva.They quickly become embroiled in the situation to include running into a Starfleet fugitive that just so happens to have been Tasha's former fiancé.While this human colony "was" intent on becoming a Federation member (which is a bit of an irony considering that it is a "human" colony), they find themselves having to deal with a violent revolution.Now Data and Yar find themselves in the middle of a bloody revolution and having to find a way to end the bloodshed and stay alive at the same time. What follows is as I stated above, an excellent early STNG novel that captures the dynamic of the relationship between Data and Yar extremely well.The last chapter of this outstanding novel is also quite intriguing as well. I highly recommend this novel to any and all fans; die hard or casual, of the Star Trek genre as it well exceeds the Star Trek novels of its time.{ssintrepid}
Fabulous Book
As fine a story of people, feeling beings, as you will ever I'm a 57 year old, very practical, lawyer.I'm not a particular Trekkie, though I have watched and read a fair amount of it.And of all I've ever seen, this is absolutely the finest. But it would be excellent if it weren't Star Trek.This is a story of God's greatest effort, human beings, sentient, feeling, caring, helping-one-another beings, as you will ever find.In my experience developing characters is the hardest of all things for writers to do well.This is as fine a job as I recall seeing. Star Trek or not, READ THIS BOOK!! ... Read more |
5. Dragon Lord of the Savage Empire by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1984-02-01)
list price: US$2.75 Isbn: 042507045X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
DragonLord of the Savage Empire |
6. Flight to Savage Empire by Jean Lorrah, Howlett | |
Paperback: 221
Pages
(1986-03-04)
list price: US$2.95 Isbn: 0451141695 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
7. Savage Empire Prophecies: Flight to the Savage Empire, Sorcerers of the Frozen Isles by Jean Lorrah, Winston A. Howlett | |
Paperback: 335
Pages
(2004-06-10)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$13.49 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 193210030X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
8. IDIC EPIDEMIC (CLASSIC STAR TREK 38) by Jean Lorrah | |
Mass Market Paperback:
Pages
(1990-01-02)
list price: US$4.50 -- used & new: US$128.81 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 067170768X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Now, on the Vulcan Science Colony Nisus, that credo of tolerance is being put to its sternest test. For here, on a planet where Vulcan, Human, Klingon, and countless other races live and work side by side, a deadly plague has sprung up. A plague whose origins are somehow rooted in the concept of I.D.I.C. itself. A plague that threatens to tear down that centuries-old maxim and replace it with an even older concept, interstellar war. Customer Reviews (9)
Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations
An excellent Star Trek novel
Promising concept and characters In particular I was drawn to the characterizations of Korsal Katasai and family.I'd barely gone past page 10 before discovering that I already cared what happened to him.Korsal is a particularly well-developed character.He is a reminder of why one must not be too quick to prejudge.He has the Klingon upbringing, and many of their strengths and weaknesses, but at the same time he is also very much his own person--someone who forces the Enterprise crew to look beyond stereotypes and judge him on his individual merits.It is the same among the Vulcans portrayed here--from the accepting T'Mir and Spock, to the narrowminded Sendet, Ms. Lorrah does not allow one to forget that even a group with bonds of culture and blood is ultimately comprised of *individuals*. Do be warned--don't expect the kind of melodic, graceful prose you'd find in a Diane Duane novel, the author I consider to be the premier writer of the series.At times the style of writing in this novel appears slightly amateurish, such as an annoying overuse of the exclamation point in places one does not normally see in narrative prose, or rather choppy, short paragraphs.The writing style is the factor that precludes The IDIC Epidemic from reaching a 5-star rating.However, this novel IS entertaining, thought-provoking, and well worth the reader's time, so I still give it a good recommendation.
Superb story, excellently written.
What brings us together, can tear us apart! |
9. Captives of the Savage Empire by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1984-02-01)
list price: US$2.75 -- used & new: US$4.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0425064654 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
Wonderful, hard to put down. |
10. Savage Empire: Dark Moon Rising by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback: 656
Pages
(2004-06-10)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$8.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 193210013X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (2)
Savage Empire
One of the best Fantasy series ever written. |
11. Channel's Destiny by Jean Lorrah, Jacqueline Lichtenberg | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1983-12-06)
list price: US$2.95 -- used & new: US$49.90 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0879978848 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
Excellent Sci Fi |
12. Wulfston's Odyssey by Jean Lorrah, Howlett | |
Paperback: 208
Pages
(1987-11-03)
list price: US$2.95 Isbn: 0451150562 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
13. Sime~Gen: The Unity Trilogy by Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback: 752
Pages
(2004-11-10)
list price: US$20.00 Isbn: 1592220037 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (9)
Sime~Gen
Symbiosis Out of Balance So what is Sime~Gen about? Let see... Set some centuries in the future, Sime~Gen has the human race divided (through either evolution or genetic manipulation, nobody knows) into two groups: Simes and Gens. Both groups basically look the same, but there is one big difference which dominates all goings-on between them: Simes have tentacles on their arms and need selyn to survive, while Gens don't have tentacles and produce selyn. Selyn isn't any type of bodily fluid but an invisible life force almost like chi, which builds up naturally in Gens but whose absence in Simes will kill them if they go more than a month. Ever since the mutation divided the species, Simes and Gens have understandably been at war. In Sime-controlled territories, Gens are raised in pens like animals and bought and sold like they're food - stripped of their selyn and tossed away. In Gen-dominated territories, by contrast, there is a saying that "The only good Sime is a dead Sime." And what makes it scary is that Gens can have Sime children and vice versa - nobody knows until they hit puberty. If Gens have Sime children, they kill them, and when Simes have them, they can of course kill them or sell them to Gen dealers. This is the basic set up of the trilogy and the plot, as it develop, involves efforts on part of Simes and Gens to overcome all the prejudice and enmity and achieve unity. After all, if Simes kill all the Gens, they'll die, and it's already a given than Gens can't kill all the Simes. None of this is explained in boring history lessons, but laid out in the stories of individuals. In House of Zeor the story centers of a Gen named Hugh Valleroy, who goes on a dangerous, secret assignment into Sime territory in order to rescue an important Gen official who also happens to be his girlfriend. (Yes, this sounds cheesy and it sort of is.) Hugh doesn't infiltrate Sime territory on his own, however, but instead is paired up with Klyd Farris, head of the titular House of Zeor. Even though Hugh has actually grown up as a Sime sympathizer (who expected he'd "changeover" at puberty), he's never been to Sime territory and arrives completely unprepared for what he finds. House of Zeor is a "householding" which, running again most prevailing laws and attitudes, is a community where Simes and Gens live in harmony. Harmony is achieved by a special kind of Sime called a Channel. Unlike regular Simes, Channels don't need to kill Gens to get the selyn they need. Channels have two "selyn transport systems" and can collect selyn from dozens of Gens, just like milking cows almost, and then go to Simes, who then take the selyn - instead of killing Gens. Channels also have selyn needs of their own, of course, and for that reason, and because they're just so important to householdings, each Channel has a Companion. Companions, Hugh learns, are Gens who produce an extraordinarily large quantity of selyn and are able to give their selyn freely to serve the appetite of the Channel. Little does Hugh know that he's natural Companion material - for Klyd, the head channel of House of Zeor! There's an awful lot of plot over the course of these three books. House of Zeor is a dive into the world of Simes and Gens and follows the story of Hugh and Klyd, while the middle book, Ambrov Keon, takes place in another part of the world. It centers on another householding, Keon, starting with the arrival of Risa Tigue, a "junct" (killing) Sime who stumbles upon a householding and learns she is a Channel. Risa has a lot to learn and although she fights it, she ends up being a big part of bringing her corner of the world towards unity. The final book, Zelerod's Doom, brings Hugh and Klyd together with the cast of of Ambrov Keon for a battle that eventually achieves the beginning of what gets to be called Unity - the day Simes and Gens begin to forge a truce. This story gets deeper into some of the relationships, in particular Hugh and Klyd's, and reveals a race struggling to figure out what they are about and how they can survive. One thing I'll say about these books is that although I did enjoy them quite a lot, the writing style, plotting and other bits of it can get to sounding cheesy. It certainly isn't the sort of rich descriptive narrative I'm used to reading (Storm Constantine, Ursula Le Guin). Instead, it's more the kind of writing you'd find in a Star Trek book, which makes a lot of sense since the authors are huge Star Trek fans and have, in fact, written Star Trek novels. This doesn't stop the books from being enjoyable, but I think it is something that needs to be noted, in case a reader is expecting great literature. Since reading Sime~Gen I have found myself wanting to read more and luckily, there is more to read, not only more books, which Meisha Merlin will be publishing over the next few years, but whole novels already online and a huge load of fan fiction, which the authors are OK with and even host on their own web site. I am so glad Alan handed me that white box!
One of my Longtime Favorites
Alisa from alisaandmike.com
# sf classics that are great today "House of Zeor".Gen intelligence operative Hugh Valleroy is considerably distraught over his beloved Aisha being apparently abducted by the Sime.He plans to risk his life to bring her home, but to do so he must meet with Klyd, a Sime.Klyd is a new type of Sime.He serves as a channel between the species, killing no one but providing nutrients for his race.Both are little regarded amongst their respective people.Hugh is considered a Sime lover because he speaks the language, which he learned from his Sime expatriate mother.Klyd and his House of Zeor are considered lunatics because the Gens are a source of food and death is a by-product of that feeding frenzy.Neither trusts the other.Yet if they fail to cooperate, they not only will falter on their quest to save Aisha, but they will also destroy any hope of peaceful coexistence as dreamed of by both men. "Ambrov Keon".Simes Morgan Tigue and his daughter Risa were sailing home on the Mizipi River when the storm suddenly hit killing the father.Risa barely survives, but to do so drains much of her internal supply of life energy selyn.She must find herself a Gen so that she can replenish her source of life-energy.Risa meets Gen Sergi ambrov Keon, who has the uncanny ability to provide selyn yet control the Sime so as to give enough for the feeder to live yet not die in the process.Sergi offers shelter and selyn to Risa.Having just failed to keep alive a channel, he hopes she is the one that along with him will prove they can live in harmony.Sergi believes she has that ability, but can he persuade her to stop the killing. "Zelerod's Doom".The end times have arrived for both species of the human race.To survive the life giving Gens and the feeder Simes must find a way to cooperate with channels being the obvious avenue.Failure to do so means the end of the Gens, which mathematically implies the termination of the Simes.Most Gens never heard of channels while most Simes think these renegades are depraved lunatics.Humanity is on the brink of extinction unless the two species stop the animosity and prejudice to reunite the human race into one people.Together in harmony all live, but divided in discord all die. The Sime-Gen novels are some of the best post apocalypse books written and to see this reprinting in one volume will bring plenty of pleasure to genre fans.The tales focus on the Gen-Sime relationship, but the key to these three books is that the two species seem real regardless of whether Jacqueline Lichtenberg or Jean Lorrah or both wrote the tale.Readers will be caught up in the action, but will appreciate the depth to the prime cast members such as Hugh and Risa.Whether the player is a Sime or a Gen they seem genuine and stay true to their people.Fans of vampire tales in a different setting than Transylvania or London will clearly want to read the great Unity Trilogy novels rolled together in one superb collection. Harriet Klausner ... Read more |
14. Star Trek: The Vulcan Academy Murders by Jean Lorrah | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1984-01-01)
-- used & new: US$20.10 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B001TI20XC Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
15. Star Trek The I D I C Epidemic by Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1970)
Asin: B000PD9IZA Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
16. SAVAGE EMPIRE - Book (1) One: Savage Empire; Book (2) Two: Dragon Lord; Book (3) Three: Captives; Book (4) Four: Flight to; Book (5) Five: Sorcerers of the Frozen Isles; Book (6) Six: Wulfston's Odyssey; Book (7) Seven: Empress Unborn by Jean (with Winston A. Howlett on two titles) Lorrah | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1984)
Asin: B003XMBA6A Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
17. NTM COLLECTED Volume 2 - Star Trek Fanzine by Lorrah jean | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1980)
Asin: B00446YJL2 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
18. EPILOGUE Part 2. Star Trek fanzine by Lorrah Jean | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1978)
Asin: B004473O8U Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
19. THE NIGHT OF THE TWIN MOONS - Star Trek Fanzine by Lorrah jean | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1978)
Asin: B004475OA6 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
20. Nessie and the Living Stone by Lois Wickstrom, Jean Lorrah | |
Paperback: 91
Pages
(2002-01-16)
list price: US$9.99 -- used & new: US$7.80 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1591092469 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description A boy must choose between keeping a treasure and saving a monster in Nessie and the Living Stone, by Lois June Wickstrom and Jean Lorrah. Craig's family, including his bratty little sister Linda, are on holiday at Loch Ness where Craig has plans to capture Nessie, the famed Loch Ness Monster. Instead, she captures him. Customer Reviews (1)
A New look at an Old Legend |
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