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The one who got awayand came back What was he doing back here, disrupting Brianna McKenzie's cozy world? Sebastian Hunter, heartbreaker extraordinaire, had actually shown up to their high school reunion. All at once, she felt that unshakable chemistry again, the life that might have been if he'd stayed in Bedford. Broken promises and regret. Why would she even consider getting involved with him again? If it weren't for his mother's suspicious encouragement, Sebastian would never have attended the school function. But then he saw Brianna, the woman he'd blocked from his thoughts for years as he threw himself into his work. The pastthose feelings he never quite forgotcame rushing back. This was his chanceto walk away again or face the person who'd captivated him, body and soul. "… (more)
User reviews
This is not typical of Stableford's other DAW SF series, which are more SF puzzle pieces. There is a little of that here, and several multi-page info-dumps, but basically it appears Stableford was just out to have fun. He dedicates the book to Lionel Fanthorpe, who was famous for churning out potboilers at a tremendous pace. Fun for what it was intended to be.
To this now frozen world come explorers and trophy hunters, looking for ancient alien relics that they can profit from. And so we meet Michael Rousseau, one such trophy hunter who comes into possession of information about penetrating deep into the centre of the planet instead of the four levels that has been the best people could do so far. But Rousseau gets caught up in an adventure involving a crime boss, an alien android on the run, and the ruthless star troopers sent to track the android down.
Rousseau is another of Stableford's cynical, hard-boiled, competent loner protagonists. He reads like Star Pilot Grainger in his earlier Hooded Swan novels and he seems to have a similar facility of getting into and out of trouble. Given the potential of the setting, the story here barely scrapes the surface (so to speak), the upper levels of this world providing the setting for this fairly conventional caper story. Only towards the end do we see hints of a deeper story. Partly this is the fault of the huge expository lumps where Rousseau spends a lot of time explaining stuff to the Earthling star troopers and their Commander.
This isn't entirely Stableford's fault: in the 1980s, US publishers were desperate for material because the sf paperback original novel was selling like mad and publishers could not get enough material to fill their schedules. A number of British writers first saw print in US editions at that time, and Stableford was one such. However, the format was fairly fixed; so the Asgard trilogy was sold to the US publisher Ace as just that - three 200-page novels. It was therefore inevitable that much of the first volume would be taken up with explanation. Nowadays, a story like this would be sold as a 600-page or more doorstopper of a novel, giving the writer a lot more space to show rather than tell.
But do not be misled; Stableford is an intelligent writer and he makes his protagonists intelligent and insightful as well. Yes, there is action, and an exotic setting, and strange aliens; but Mike Rousseau thinks first and shoots second, and that's refreshing. Worth finding.
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Omslaget viser to mennesker i rumdragter der trasker gennem knæhøjt vand. I baggrunden ses et par store varenlignende dyr
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi
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823.914 |