The girl who heard dragons

by Anne McCaffrey

Paper Book, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Publication

New York : TOR, 1995.

Description

After the loss of their Hold, Aramina and her family search for a permanent home on Pern and find their journey endangered as others discover Aramina's secret, that she has the rare power of understanding the speech of dragons.

User reviews

LibraryThing member wendyrey
As can be said of most short story collection, there are good stories here and middling though not really any outright bad stories. Ms McCaffrey is at her best when she sticks to dragons and horses, and the first tale in the book - that of the title- is by far the best of the lot.
Decent book for
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McCaffrey fans.
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LibraryThing member Shoga
A very decent collection of short stories and I enjoyed reading them overall. I found a few to be rather boring and just skimmed/skipped those over. There were some though, such as “Velvet Fields” and “The Bones Do Lie”, which really stuck with me and I’d go back to read those again.
LibraryThing member MarthaJeanne
Whether writing fantasy, science fiction, or straight fiction, (This collection contails all three.) McCaffrey's characters are real people, and the background is never more important than how the people relate to each other.
LibraryThing member aimless22
An interesting mix of fifteen short stories for young adults. Seven are sci fi and set in a world where the Khalians are the enemy to the various races of good guys trying to make the universe safe. Five are fantasy stories about various subjects. Three are odd vignettes about different topics.
The
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most fascinating to me of these fifteen were the one about the first exogenetic birth in the 1950's, the one about the doctor who rebuilds a man's entire body because she finds his face the handsomest she's ever seen, the one about the slaves in the south who heal and protect with their strange powers, and the one told from the old horse's point of view as he realizes that his mistress has died.
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LibraryThing member gypsysmom
I've been an Anne McCaffrey fan for ages but it's been a long time since I read her short stories. She is a very versatile writer and these stories demonstrate that. They range from pretty hard core science fiction to fantasy to light fiction with a touch of oddness. If you like her Pern books,
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then the title story will appeal to you. If you cried for the Ship Who Sang, then Duty Calls gives you another view of the brainship and brawn teamwork. McCaffrey's love of horses comes through in A Quiet One and Habit is an Old Horse. For any fan, the opening work "So, You're Anne McCaffrey" will be very interesting.

I had the honour of meeting Anne many years ago at the only Science Fiction Convention I have ever attended, right here in Winnipeg. She dished out ice cream at the opening, read from The Ship Who Sang, answered questions and signed books. It was such a thrill.
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Language

Original publication date

1994-04

Physical description

433 p.; 18 inches

ISBN

0812510992 / 9780812510997
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