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Amazonaws.com's Price: $7.99
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Now!
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
Fabric Type: 9780451460776
Fax Number: First Thus
Legal Disclaimer: 0451460774
Maximum Color Depth: Roc
Metal Type: Roc
Publisher: 1
Region Code: 608
Total External Bays Free: September 05, 2006
Total Firewire Ports: Roc
Roc
Features:- ISBN13: 9780451460776
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Editorial Review:
Product Description: The national bestselling alternate history epic continues...
Ten years after The Change rendered technology inoperable throughout the world, two brave leaders built two thriving communities in Oregon's Willamette Valley. But now the armies of the totalitarian Protectorate are preparing to wage war over the priceless farmland.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I'm sorry, I meant to say write " Juniper Mackenzie. This character has to be one of the most obnoxious woman in fiction. I have not problem with Wicca, but the constant droning on about Lord and Lady gets tired after one paragraph, now try 400 pages of it. This is a woman who was a single mother who only had the motivation to sing in northwest college bars. Nothing about her before the change would make you believe she could organize or run a fry line at McDonalds, but we are supposed to believe ... Read More
Rating: -
OK, I read DIES THE FIRE and gave it 4 stars for its originality and fairly well-developed main characters. What went wrong is that the very things I found bothersome in the the first novel are now infuriating. The prose has become so obtuse and "period" that reading was more an act of interpretation than enjoyment in many parts. The British chapters contain great story-telling but fot the colloquial language. The use of "Alleyne" instead of "Alan" or "Allen" is simply a precursor. Maybe Stirling ... Read More
Rating: -
After the inspired premise but flawed execution of Dies in the Fire, I was hoping that this novel would get things going in a good way. Second novels of fantasy series often do that, since the opening book exposition is out of the way for the most part. Not so here, as there was still more exposition in the form of the British contigent being added to things.
And you know what? I found their situation to be more interesting than the doings in Oregon. I mean sure, Sir Nigel Loring, his ... Read More
Rating: -
Good premise, but goes on forever and loses impact. Post apocalyptic wars between good guys, bad guys, powerful and savage people. If you want a long series about groups with problems that never get solved, this is it. Stirling's writing has jumped the shark.
Rating: -
Wow,
Do not bother picking this book up. It started decently, but 400 pages later nothing much happens except they kill a few bandits and we learn 200 pages about a post-modernist celtic culture that nobody would give two rags about. I mean pages and pages of protagonists watching children play during a Samhain festival, talking about nothing and doing nothing. Mr. Stirling, please take a laxative. About halfway through the book Stirling does flashbacks... alright, one flashback is fine... ... Read More
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