Preparing to travel through time in order to face a band of predatory aliens, Ross Murdoch plans to leap into the feudal period of Dominion, where he can help win a war that will bring defeat to the aliens. Reprint. AB.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Utterly disappointing,
By
This review is from: Firehand (Paperback)
**** Spoilers follow, but that's OK because you want to avoid the book like the plague anyway ****
Having recently read the first four books in the Time Traders series (which are OK but not the best of Norton), I expected this book to be more of the same. I was disappointed to find out that the book was not in fact written by Norton, and this is clear from the cloying parsing and utter lack of dramatic plotting which the book suffers from throughout. Griffin, the co-author, is obviously the author of this book, with little to no input from Andre Norton herself. Worse, it was obvious to me that Griffin's original effort was not a Time Trader's story at all, but a book written by her otherwise, and then hastily and ineptly adapted to wedge it into the Time Traders series. Yep, add a chapter to the beginning and to the end, globally replace a few character names, insert a few references to the project, and there you have it ... a Time Traders series book! Well, not really. Griffin is so in love with her characters that they NEVER suffer a setback to their plans, completely relieving any possibility of dramatic tension. The very evil plans of the bad guys are briefly discussed by the bad guys ... and never again bear on the course of the book. The two sets of 'bad guy' leaders are found and dispatched in the most contrived and simplistic way (un)imaginable. Ashe's contributions to the story are effectively completely dumped for Griffin's newly introduced character Eveleen Riordan, with whom she is completely in love. Let me just tell you that Ross Murdock falls in love and marries Riordan during the course of this book. Knowing that, you can safely bypass this and you are caught up for the next installment. You may notice that Griffin was dumped as the new author of the series very quickly after the appearance of this stinker. I'm not a big fan of authors turning over their work to a 'guest author', and having their name appear on the cover only to spur sales. This book is a perfect example of why that can go VERY VERY wrong. The book has nothing of Norton but a few character names. The plot is completely broken, and even action sequences near the end that resolve the conflict are contrived and unworkable. Book 6, written by the replacement 'guest author', Sherwood Smith, is a big improvement, and I recommend that you skip this pitiful sell out and go directly to Echoes in Time!!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Lots of viewpoints are possible for this book,
By Indiana Reviewer (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Firehand (Paperback)
If Firehand is compared to the first three Time Trader novels written by Norton, it doesn't quite cut the mustard. The Ross and Ashe characters are just a bit different from their namesakes in the earlier books. Those first Time Trader stories were - in my opinion - among Norton's best works.But relative to the fourth and final novel of the series written exclusively by Norton - Key out of Time - Firehand is a work of art. Back in 1963 Norton had clearly gotten bored with the whole story line, and after a very lackluster effort had left the three humans and two dolphins stranded thousands of years in the past. Fast forward 31 years, and P. M. Griffin was invited to dig them out of the hole where Norton had left them. In my opinion she did a very nice job of it, and I judge the first part of this book to be the best part The adventures on the next planet where they're tasked to actually go back in time and change the future there was perhaps a little too routine. Ross Murdoch becoming a major military commander was really a stetch! Though there were no surprises at all, this book was still a pleasant read for me.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
surprise,
This review is from: Firehand (Paperback)
I picked up this book at a resellers shop with no cover on it or any idea what it was about.(It is hardback,not stolen).Norton is great and she doesn't let you down here.Smooth writing and great characters who you feel you know by the end of the book.My only complaint is that the book is fairly short and therefore not a terribly engrossing novel.Try it,you might be surprised as pleasantly as I was.
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