e99 Online Shopping Mall
Help | |
Home - Authors - Scott Melissa (Books) |
  | 1-20 of 101 | Next 20 |
click price to see details click image to enlarge click link to go to the store
1. The Game Beyond by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1984-11-01)
list price: US$2.95 -- used & new: US$6.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671559184 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (2)
Not Free SF Reader
Alternate history/Far Future |
2. The Kindly Ones by Melissa Scott | |
Mass Market Paperback:
Pages
(1987-09-15)
list price: US$2.95 -- used & new: US$3.70 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671653512 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (2)
Author takes the phrase 'Space Opera' too Literally
A Complex World, full of Complex People |
3. Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 384
Pages
(2011-02-01)
list price: US$15.99 -- used & new: US$10.87 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0765328488 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (15)
Not Free SF Reader
Slow starter, but worth the trouble
Excellent read...
Revised Review
Thriller in cyberspace |
4. Shadow Man by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 312
Pages
(2009-10-05)
list price: US$20.00 -- used & new: US$15.46 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1590212428 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (10)
Interesting, character driven SF / wish the book had been longer!
Excellent
Not Free SF Reader
a pamphlet
Five Genders, One Humanity For the Most Important Man, Warreven's sex was a non-issue: Warreven would simply classify himself as a woman and become Tendelathe's wife. This was a common arrangement, as herms did not live their lives as herms, but as men or women. It was up to them to choose. Warren would not choose, however; while he would willingly have married his long-time friend, he refused to be forced into declaring himself female. He was comfortable living as a man and that's how he wanted it to stay. He refused the offer. The decision ultimately changed his life. The story point is one of the keystones in Melissa Scott's 1995 novel Shadow Man, a book which explores human gender and what life might be like if things were not as "simple" as we (perhaps wrongly) view them today. The planet Hara, where Warreven, the Most Important Man and his son live is one of countless human colonies founded at a point in the future when humans have mastered faster-than-light (FTL) travel and have spread across the galaxy. As the story opens, Hara is in the process of slowly but surely being re-connected with the colonial network, after a few hundred years' separation. The reason Hara was cut off is the same reason it's now so different from other human colonies. FTL travel, as boundary-breaking as it was, was in large part made possible by the development of specialized drugs, which prevented the side effects of the travel, keeping humans healthy and sane. However, these drugs themselves had a major side effect, one which no one had expected or even noticed under it was too late: The drugs affected human DNA and caused a large upswing (as high as 25%) in intersex births. There were no longer men and women, but men, women... and several other sexes. This discovery was so shocking and devastating to the human space colonization movement that all FTL travel was put on hold. Chaos erupted, arguments ensued, and it was during this time that the group making its way to the planet known as Hara were cut off. People on hara developed the same genetic"abnormalities" as the rest of those who had taken FTL drugs. Not only their children, but their children's children, and on down the line, were born into one of five gender categories: woman, fem, herm, men, or man. The crucial difference on Hara, as opposed to within the human colonization effort and humanity as a whole (the "Concord"), was that the people on Hara chose to deny that this change had occurred. Almost all Concord humans had finally embraced the sexual differences and all the new sexual orientations and identities that came with it. They "moved on " with the change and re-started FTL travel. Harans were different. Fiercely traditional, they clung to concepts of men and women, and those who did not fit those categories were, officially, made to fit. Despite the decision he made at 18, Warreven has made a good life for himself. He's got a job as something like an attorney, part of a three-person team. One of his partners is a man, the other a herm, like himself, only more politically outspoken (having fought a court battle to have legal status as "herm," not one sex or the other). Their firm often handles cases involving the "odd-bodied," those Harans who do not conform to Haran sexual standards. Warren is a skilled negotiator, and thanks to his continuing friendship with the Most Important Man (who still talks wistfully of his would-have-been "daughter-in-law"), he has a comfortable life. In his off time, Warreven's life isn't quite the savory life of a lawyer, however. He enjoys going to "wrangwys" bars, where fems, herms and mems mix amongst themselves, along with men and women who come to experiment in ways which are, officially, either forbidden or strongly frowned upon. In these bars, "wrangwys" become "trade"; Warreven has been "trade" himself. In Shadow Man, we see Warreven's life change from something mostly stable and secure, where he is happy to remain within the status quo, to one in which his entire life is turned upside down and Hara is on the verge of a minor revolution. The story takes off when one day Warreven meets an offworlder named Tatian. The offworlder has come on an assignment from one of the big pharmaceutical companies trading with Hara, and at first he's strictly business. But after he meets Warreven and is introduced to Haran's rather different social set-up, he can't seem to get himself untangled from a budding revolution among society's oppressed. He finds himself encouraging Warreven and eventually assisting him. It's hard for him to believe the "odd-bodied" have allowed themselves to be oppressed at all, and even harder for him as he watches Warreven struggle with his role in the new revolution, especially when things get out of control, with attacks on bars, beatings, and riot police. One of the things Scott does in Shadow Man is set up an allegory for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender civil rights movement, and one of the things that makes the book work is that this allegory isn't done in a heavy-handed way, but one that makes you understand the nature of social movements and those caught in the crossfire. Warreven doesn't want to be a revolutionary. He doesn't want to be a hero. He doesn't really want to be a herm -- not the way humans on Concord are herms. He doesn't know what any of that is about. However, the way events unfold, he has no choice, morally, but to press on and become a revolutionary, become a hero, and eventually, to become a herm. Change has to start somewhere and it just so happens that it starts with him. Shadow Man is a wonderful, thought-provoking book which, although somewhat dissatisfying in the fact that it doesn't tie up the book's conflicts in a neat bow, makes you wonder about the nature of being human and being part of society, whether accepted or not. ... Read more |
5. Point of Hopes by Melissa Scott, Lisa A. Barnett | |
Paperback: 421
Pages
(1997-02)
list price: US$6.99 -- used & new: US$102.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0812550994 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (3)
more or less a detective story
A Pity There Aren't More Like This...
A worthy addition to any fantasy library. |
6. Burning Bright by Melissa Scott | |
Mass Market Paperback: 400
Pages
(1994-05-15)
list price: US$4.99 -- used & new: US$6.90 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0812521757 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (7)
Not Free SF Reader
Sometimes, political intrigue is just another game
Melissa Scott's Best Book
Fun book & great gaming system
Wonderful |
7. Mighty Good Road by Melissa Scott | |
Mass Market Paperback: 306
Pages
(1990-05)
list price: US$3.95 -- used & new: US$1.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671698737 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (2)
not a first contact novel
Linguistic Science Fiction |
8. Five-Twelfths of Heaven by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1985-04-01)
list price: US$2.95 -- used & new: US$22.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671559524 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (4)
Not Free SF Reader
Good mix of sci-fi & fantasy with subtle poltical commentary
One of Scott's best The universe of Five-Twelfths is afairly standard one in some ways.The Hegemon, a widening empire of manyplanets, is a tightly-controlled, autocratic society that places extremelimits on women; women must be veiled at all times, aren't allowed to ownproperty or take legal actions, etc.However, the fantasy element comes inwith the elements of star travel, which are much like magic, and especiallythe magi, who are able to use spells to control both Purgatory (thecelestial, partially supermaterial state attainable by material creatures)and Hell (the submaterial state).The blending of the typical SF andunusual fantasy elements make this world a unique and complete creation,interesting in its own right. The plot is also fairly good. Five-Twelfths is the story of Silence, a woman in the very male-restrictedprofession of pilot.Caught up in circumstances beyond her control, shemakes an unusual alliance, finds herself pitted against the Hegemony, anddiscovers that she has powers in excess of anything anyone expected. All in all, a satisfying read and much more interesting than is usual inscience fantasy blends.Scott makes the most of her talents in this book -pity it's out of print, but many libraries will have a copy. (NB:Five-Twelfths of Heaven is the first in a trilogy - the sequels are Silencein Solitude and The Empress of Earth - that should definitely be read inorder.)
Five-Twelfths of Heaven |
9. The Jazz by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 320
Pages
(2001-07-06)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$15.74 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B000IOF184 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Quietly, outside the hot, critical spotlight turned upon the original cyberpunks and second-generation cyberwunderkind Neil Stephenson, Melissa Scott has become one of the strongest, most productive, and least street-glamour-blinded cyberpunks writing at the turn of the millennium. This is not entirely a surprise; in 1986, she won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. She is also a two-time winner of the Lambda Literary Award for best science fiction novel. If you haven't read Melissa Scott, The Jazz is a fine place to start. --Cynthia Ward Customer Reviews (12)
Melissa Scott creates another good one!
Not Free SF Reader
Trouble and Her Friends, draft 2 I have to admit I never finished reading this book. After half of it, I decided that the plot wasn't nearly strong enough, the characters weren't alive, and the setting was too mundane to keep my interest. Compared to Trouble, the tech in this book is peanuts - the computers aren't too much further along than those we have today - and not much else has changed. Such near-future settings can work, obviously, but there wasn't enough substance here. I would love to see this idea - the jazz - rewritten in a shorter format. As the basis for a novel, I don't think it's strong enough; especially not as the basis for a thriller like this book wants to be.
"I Heard a Rumour" The book is set in an indefinite future America that seems to be a generation or so from now, where most of society seems bent on amusing itself to death, especially people who "play the jazz." And the people who play the jazz in Scott's world don't have saxophones; they have web equipment, and the idea is to spread chaos through rumour. (Anyone whose first wakeup call to the dark side of the Internet occurred on the day they received their first e-mail warning about the Good Times virus will quickly get the idea.) In one sequence, in order to create a diversion at one point the heroine, Tin Lizzy, creates chaos at a shopping mall by sending out false rumors of a new product. But let Scott tell it herself, regarding the ultimate jazz her heroine "Tin Lizzy" plays: "this was something people wanted to hear, and this one, too, was picked up and repeated." The story is told from two POVs, Lizzy's (who takes to the road with the teenager she's trying to help) and the cop trying to capture her while staying on the good side of his boss, who's a borderline psychopath. Scott's prose is spare; her characters seem real; the climax is cynical. Each sequence is a beautiful set piece in itself. Despite the title, nothing seems improvisatory. It's all schemed out as carefully as a Bananarama album, and it entertains in precisely the same way.
Best yet from Melissa Scott |
10. The Garden (Star Trek Voyager, No 11) by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 278
Pages
(1997-02-01)
list price: US$5.99 -- used & new: US$2.59 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671567993 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (12)
Intriguing idea, reasonably well-handled.
Not Free SF Reader
STV #11 The Garden - Overly unimaginative! The strange thing about Star Trek Voyager novels published at this time is that quite often the cover art is better for them while the stories weren't while novels in the other series were exactly the opposite. The Premise: "The Garden" is one more example in the Star Trek Voyager line of novels where the premise of "We're lost in the Delta Quadrant and we're desperately in need of supplies" was way over done!This time around, Neelix leads the valiant crew of Voyager to the Kirse homeworld.The Kirse are renowned for their bountiful crops and their enigmatic nature.As timing never seemed to be on their side, Captain Janeway attempts to negotiate a trade agreement with the Kirse when the Andirrim attack the Kirse and she finds herself and her crew caught in the middle and unsure as to which side to trust... What follows from there, as stated above, is a novel that in its premise alone had lots of potential but ultimately falls flat in its execution.Despite panning this novel, I would still recommend it to other fans of Star Trek fiction but only on the basis of it being part of the "line" for those, like myself, who attempt to read them all.{ssintrepid}
the best of times and the worst of times This was one of the most interesting story concepts that I have come across in the Voyager series. The only reason I could not give this book five stars and then some is because of the vast number of disconcerting typos throughout the book. I'm not talking about the simple occasional letter left off a word... at one point one ensign's gender pronoun references change back and forth several times in the same chapter. Proofreaders are worth the money! But if you're not distracted by grammatical incongruities, this is a wonderfully engaging story.
Not my best use of free time. The Garden is the exception. It's well written, but the story itself just didn't entertain me.From beginning to end, I kept waiting for it to capture my imagination, but it just didn't happen.The aliens seemed a little flat to me, and the main characters were a bit off as well. Janeway seemed more like a female version of Captain Jellico than the fair-minded leader we came to know on the show.She was constantly reprimanding someone, or sending a sharp glance.And Harry Kim or Tom Paris were continually blushing or apologizing in response.Maybe it's me, but I just don't see the characters that way.It quickly went from amusing to distracting. While this story has some interesting moments, it fell short for me.It's not one I'd knock myself out to get a hold of. ... Read more |
11. The Roads Of Heaven by Melissa Scott | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1988-01-01)
Asin: B000VFW9OY Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
How did I not read this as a teenager |
12. Five Twelfths of Heaven by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1990-04-01)
list price: US$3.95 Isbn: 0671698834 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
great fun--read the next two novels as well! I don't think the quality of5-12ths of Heaven is *quite* on the same level as the two sequels, but thatmay be because the book is so occupied with getting Silence into *trouble*that it comes off as a little too relentless.Some of the scenes couldhave been written with a touch more humor which would have helped theoverall flow. On the other hand, Scott's description of the space driveused is absolutely otherworldly, fantastic, and wonderfully poetic.Youwill find yourself rereading these books over and over again simply for thedescriptions of the travel alone. Other scenes that come tomind--Silence's testing to become a practitioner (extra meaning for thoseof us who have gone through a thesis defense!), the flying of the Earthroad, the trip via the portolan, and the trip into Man's Island by trans. It's unfortunate that these books are out of print--I and a friend ofmine immediately snap up any copies we ever find at used book stores tokeep on hand as gifts for friends who appreciate good SF.I hope that somepublisher will reprint them. ... Read more |
13. Night Sky Mine by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 384
Pages
(1997-10-15)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$12.79 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0312861567 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (9)
SciFI at it's best
There's no There There.
Not Free SF Reader
Light reading, fun setting In the far-future universe of the book, programs are no longerwritten, they're bred.They've been equipped with replication, attack, anddefense code, and they live in the invisible world, preying on andinterbreeding with other programs to form new ones.In the wildnets,programs interbreed at will, and are subject to evolutionary pressure - thewildnets are essentially a virtual ecosystem.Unfortunately, this opens upboth the possibilities for useless or undesirable programs and the outsidechance that a superprogram will evolve. Ista, the main character, isan apprentice hypothecary, one who harvests wild program and analyzes code. She's lived for almost all her life in the coporation-owned Audumlasystem.She knows nothing of her antecedents; at age two, Ista was thesole survivor of a mineship attack, and was adopted by her rescuer. Without knowledge of her parents, she is not a legal citizen, so when shemeets two men who are investigating mineship disasters, she has to helpthem.Together, they expose an illegal wild breeding effort and putthemselves in danger. The characters are likeable and fairly realistic. Ista is a streetwise adolescent, but definitely still not fully adult, andby far the most full-fleshed of the characters.The relationships betweenthe characters are, at least in the first half, both believeable andunderstandable.(For example, Sein and Justin, the two men, fight the waylong term couples fight.)In the second half, the characters are subsumedby the plot, which is unfortunate. Good Scott novels leave you wantingto know more about the world, the setting, and this one is no exception. Although the plot is interesting enough to hold attention, it's really justa framework for exploring the universe.The book would have been betterhad the plot been more complex - and the book quite a bit longer - but it'sa great SF read nonetheless.
Some nice bits, but never really goes anywhere. I was often annoyed by the very poor editing of this book.It's rife with grammar and spelling mistakes which essentially act like reading speed bumps.The author also has a habit of inserting lengthy statements into the middle of sentences by hyphenating them - often at awkward places, and often several lines in length, in fact sometimes quite a bit longer than this one, making sentences rather hard to follow- when a separate sentence would be much cleaner.By the end of the book, I was pretty tired of having to reread the beginnings of sentences due to this. Another bad habit which pops up throughout the book is the unexplained use of made-up words.Apparently the author feels that to stop and explain every new term would bog things down, which is true, but instead of limiting her use of meaningless words, she just throws them around and lets the reader's imagination go at them.While this is fine to some extent, there is too much of it in this book.There are lists of names of cyberspace denizens which serve no purpose at all.On the other hand, I would have liked more description of some of the terms, like "hypothecary".The main character is studying to become one, and the reader learns a bit about it through her actions, but still many questions are left unanswered.The reader would have been better served by more description of the important terms and less use of the meaningless ones. The cyberspace concept here is fairly original, although like almost every other cyberspace in SF, it's too far removed from the reality of electronic information to be believable to anyone with a technical background.The portrayal of software personified as flora and fauna is an interesting one in concept, but the execution goes wa! y too far in giving data the attributes of physical objects or creatures.Too many times I found myself wondering why things would have developed the way they had in the book. Like most of the author's protagonists, the main characters are gay, although unlike some of her other work, that point is irrelevant to the story.This book isn't about gay characters, it's about characters who happen to be gay.Unfortunately, these gay heroes are all pretty one-dimensional.Except for Ista, the main protagonist, practically no background is given for any of the characters.Even Ista's origins are a mystery to both the characters and the reader.Likewise, the only growth or development any of the characters experience in the book is the occasional reference to Ista's budding romantic feelings towards her friend Stinne.Even this doesn't go anywhere- the situation between them is basically the same at the end of the book as at the beginning. All in all, this book was a decent effort, but no single aspect of it really held my attention for very long.Even the ending was something of a letdown- it felt like the author wasn't sure how she should end it and ended up leaving too much unresolved.It screams "sequel".Unfortunately there are too many books on the shelf better than this one for me to continue with this story. ... Read more |
14. Point of Dreams by Melissa Scott, Lisa A. Barnett | |
Paperback: 352
Pages
(2001-12-11)
list price: US$15.95 -- used & new: US$15.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0312875894 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Point of Dreams is an accomplished and entertaining fantasy mystery, written with the same rigor as the best nonmagical mysteries. Since Point of Dreams is the sequel to The Armor of Light and Point of Hopes, its early pages may be tough going for some readers unfamiliar with the previous novels, but all readers will find themselves captivated by the novel and unwilling to put it down before they reach the end. Melissa Scott received the John W. Campbell Award for best new writer and has twice won the Lambda Literary Award for best science fiction novel. --Cynthia Ward Customer Reviews (10)
intricate
Rich and satisfying
Fun read but less engaging then Point of Hopes For those of you who've read Point of Hopes and are hoping for more romance between Philip and Nico you won't be totally disappointed. Unfortunately, the authors made the odd choice of setting Point of Dreams 6 months after the case of the missing children has been solved and Nico and Philip are already involved physically and are moving quickly toward 'leman' status. There is no sex of any kind in this novel so if you are looking to be titilated and nothing else, look elsewhere. You won't even be allowed to witness a passionate kiss between the lovers. The reader is treated to a few charming and cozy domestic scenes in which Philip's nurturing nature emerges. Perhaps the authors wanted them to be at the more comfortable stage for this story in which case I wish they had saved it for another book so we could have been the voyeurs of the early stages of their romance. Youknow, the ROMANTIC parts! In the first book we are left hanging with vague feelings of attraction the men feel toward each other but barely acknowledge to themselves beyond vague feelings. The artistic decision to bypass the magical early moments of mutual attraction is questionable. The mystery wasn't too hard to figure out and it took me awhile to figure out the significance of the flowers and the Alphabet book. I imagine the flowers, which were raised from expensive and delicate corms were based on the violent,intrigue-filled history of tulips in Western culture, albeit with a different twist. In this novel, the flowers are believed to have magic properties when used in conjuction with the book in question. It is Rathe's job to discover if there is any validity to the magic or if it is just a hoax. I would have liked to have seen more of Chresta Aconin, the playwrite responsible for the furor over the Alphabet and the corms. He is obviously based on poet/playwrite Christopher Marlowe, or at least Scott's characterization of him in Armour of Light. That said, I enjoyed the book for the characters and the setting. I do look forward to another "Point" novel as there is the makings of a very engaging series here.
A weak little sister to Point of Hopes The plot of Dreams is fairly weak.It's hard to write SF/mystery that obeys all the rules of traditional mysteries, and though Barnett and Scott succeeded in Hopes, they fail here - the mystery is remarkably easy to solve and is transparently clear by the book's midpoint. Also, the setting, which was easily the best part of Hopes, is in Dreams just a backdrop for a (relatively) normal theater production.Hopes established a fascinating world.Dreams inhabits a tiny portion of it. The real problem, though, is the further development of the main characters.At the start of Dreams, Rathe and Eslingen are living together, having gone from unexpressed mutual interest to an ongoing, committed relationship between books.Scott and Barnett, in choosing not to show the early stages of the romance, are making an unusual, daring, and ultimately unsuccessful choice.They can't, or won't, write the relationship convincingly without the early bits.(I love Melissa Scott's writing, and I honestly believe she *could* do this right, but that only makes this book's failure worse.) In Dreams, it's hard to believe that Rathe and Eslingen actually love each other.In the brief interludes they spend together, they show very little affection, let alone romantic love.The strongest emotion they seem to feel is mutual jealousy; that's not exactly proof of true love.And it doesn't help that the one passionate sequence in the book is between Rathe and an ex-lover.The intensity of that bit just underscores the absence of any such feeling between our heroes. Despite the problems, though, the book is still a good one. Fantasy/mysteries are rare, as I said, and the book would be worth reading for that alone.Add in the marvelous setting and the light, fun writing, and Point of Dreams becomes more than worth the purchase price.I just hope that the third book in the series reveals more kinship with Hopes than with Dreams.
Perfect blend of fantasy, mystery, & historical |
15. Armor of Light, The by Melissa Scott, Elisabeth Carey, Lisa A. Barnett | |
Hardcover: 393
Pages
(1997-10-01)
list price: US$23.00 -- used & new: US$10.49 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0915368293 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (5)
a near hit
Not Quite What I Expected, But Very Enjoyable
Like fantasy? Like Elizabethan England? This is for you!
I still like it! This book I still read for pleasure, even after Ifinished the cover.I read a lot of alternate history, and this surelyranks among the best.
Historical fantasy as it should be! |
16. Proud Helios (Star Trek Deep Space Nine, No 9) by Melissa Scott | |
Mass Market Paperback: 277
Pages
(1995-02-01)
list price: US$5.50 -- used & new: US$1.85 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0671883909 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The free flow of traffic to the Gamma Quadrant is vital to the recovery and survival of the planet Bajor and to Federation interests as well. When a mysterious cloaked ship begins raiding wormhole shipping, cleaning out holds and killing entire crews, Commander Benjamin Sisko of Deep Space Nine™ acts at once to stop the menace. Commander Sisko has unexpected aid: the cloaked vessel has been striking Cardassian ships as well, and the Cardassian commander Gul Dukat intends to destroy the ship at all costs. Their unlikely alliance works well -- until two of Sisko's crewmen are captured by the raiders. Gul Dukat will stop at nothing to gain his victory; now Sisko must locate the predator ship, hold off the Cardassians long enough to rescue his people -- and prevent an interstellar war! Customer Reviews (7)
Adventure and action from the early days of DS9
Not Free SF Reader
Solidly entertaining action story.
DS9 #9 Proud Helios - An interesting premise! The cover art for "Proud Helios" is very typical for the time of its publishing, which doesn't really show much in imagination. The premise: Bajor depends quite heavily on the flow of traffic to the Gamma Quadrant through the wormhole and when that flow is suddenly interrupted by a mysterious ship using a cloaking device it is time for Commander Sisko to step in and stop it.This mysterious ship also starts attacking Cardassian ships as well, which brings about an unexpected alliance between Sisko and Gul Dukat. As this novel is one of the earlier Deep Space Nine novels and I recommend all of them, I will also recommend this novel more as one of those "completists" type novels for Trek fiction readers.{ssintrepid}
Unfocused |
17. Silence in Solitude the Silence Leigh Trilogy by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1990-04-01)
list price: US$3.95 Isbn: 0671698826 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (2)
Not Free SF Reader
Rescued the trilogy for me |
18. Scott Peterman | |
Hardcover: 112
Pages
(2006-06-02)
list price: US$50.00 -- used & new: US$72.78 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0976670879 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (2)
A Zen Experience
The Sublime on Ice |
19. The Empress of Earth: The Silence Leigh Trilogy by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 346
Pages
(1987-11-01)
list price: US$3.50 Isbn: 0671653644 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
Not Free SF Reader |
20. Conceiving the Heavens: Creating the Science Fiction Novel by Melissa Scott | |
Paperback: 208
Pages
(1997-08-26)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$18.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0435070088 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Called "one of today's most provocative young writers" by Science Fiction Bookselling, Melissa Scott is clearly a master of writing science fiction. In Conceiving the Heavens, Scott shares her successful techniques and insight to help would-be science fiction writers turn their ideas into workable stories. Topics discussed include:
Customer Reviews (1)
Start thinking |
  | 1-20 of 101 | Next 20 |