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Forerunner: The Second Venture (Universe of Style) [Mass Market Paperback]

Andre Norton (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 15, 1991 Universe of Style
Sisma, the beggar whose mind held the ancient legacy of the Forerunners, had escaped her claw-and-fang life in the Burrows, with the off-planet Rangers. But the Rangers wanted her in captivity for study by historians.

So Sisma and Zass, her winged hunting zorsal, escaped again, taking a stolen lifeboat to an unknown world. A desert where shapeshifting creatures lurked beneath the sand, where Zass and Sisma's hunting skills, psychic powers, and strange link to the Elder One in Sisma's mind were their only survival weapons.

Then Thom, the Ranger who saved--and perhaps betrayed--Sisma, crashed on the planet. Together, they realized that a mysterious, mind-threatening and possibly monstrous power had found them...

And only the Elder One could help.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

For well over a half century, Andre Norton has been one of the most popular science fiction and fantasy authors in the world. Since her first SF novels were published in the 1940s, her adventure SF has enthralled readers young and old. With series such as Time Traders, Solar Queen, Forerunner, Beast Master, Crosstime, and Janus, as well as many stand-alone novels, her tales of action and adventure throughout the galaxy have drawn countless readers to science fiction.

Her fantasy, including the best-selling Witch World series, her "Magic" series, and many other unrelated novels, has been popular with readers for decades. Lauded as a Grand Master by the Science Fiction Writers of America, she is the recipient of a Life Achievement Award from the World Fantasy Convention. Not only have her books been enormously popular; she also has inspired several generations of SF and fantasy writers, especially many talented women writers who have followed in her footsteps. In the past two decades she has worked with other writers on a number of novels. Most notable among these are collaborations with Mercedes Lackey, the Halfblood Chronicles, as well as collaborations with A.C. Crispin (in the Witch World series) and Sherwood Smith (in the Time Traders and Solar Queen series). An Ohio native, Ms. Norton lived for a number of years in Winter Park, Florida, and now makes her home in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where she continues to write, and presides over High Hallack, a writers' resource and retreat.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books (January 15, 1991)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0812513649
  • ISBN-13: 978-0812513646
  • Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 4.2 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #341,565 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Sequel to "Forerunner" relating Simsa's further adventures, February 6, 2004
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Andre Norton has written many SF novels using the theme of the Forerunners, an ancient race of space farers that disappeared (except for their artifacts) well before humanity took to the stars. Other books employing this theme are "Sargasso of Space" (1955), "Exiles of the Stars" (1971), "Forerunner Foray" (1973), "Forerunner (1981), and "Moon Called" (1982).

In most of these novels, Norton describes the ancient Forerunner ruins as vast, underground high technology installations where ordinary human beings can be driven crazy just by the odd angles of the walls, the mazes and tunnels where they're always getting lost, or by the harmful emanations from the ancient and only partly understood machines.

However in "Forerunner" (1981) and "Forerunner: the Second Venture" (1985), Norton's Forerunners have gone beyond technology and into the realm of what we would call supernatural powers.

"Forerunner: the Second Venture" is a sequel to "Forerunner," and continues the story of Simsa, once a runner and fetcher for an old Burrow-dweller in the ancient port of Kuxortal, and now a reincarnated Forerunner with superhuman talents, including telepathy, the ability to channel killing forces through her sun-and-moon scepter, and the ability to tamper with other peoples' minds.

In "Forerunner," Simsa teamed up with the off-worlder Thom who came to Kuxortal in search of his missing brother. She and Thom survived many harrowing adventures together, and they seemed like good friends at the end of the book, but in this sequel Simsa suspects Thom of abandoning her to his fellow scientists. No one has ever met a living Forerunner, and Simsa finds herself an 'honored guest,' i.e. prisoner, on a starship where at least one of the scientists would like to have a go at dissecting her. She escapes from the starship, via its life boat which will automatically search out a planet where humans can, at the very least, breathe the atmosphere.

And that's exactly what the lifeboat finds: a planet where Simsa can breathe the air, but which otherwise seems inimical to life. She and her zorsal (think 'bat' with four feet and cute fern-like antennae) almost perish in a searing, rocky wasteland where the only thing that moves is an eerie river of sand.

Norton has invented some interesting aliens in 'The Second Venture.' There are the bad-smelling, octopus-like blobs that live in the rivers of sand, but there are also intelligent creatures in one secluded valley where Simsa finally stumbles upon food and water. Simsa must persuade the furry lobster-things that she too is intelligent and worthy of their respect. She must also do battle with the Forerunner who is co-inhabiting her body, and last but not least, find Thom who has crash-landed into one of the rivers of sand while searching for Simsa.

Norton's heroine is by turn sour, prickly, brave, and fiercely independent. She's hard to like, but it is easy to admire her, especially in her fight almost-to-the-death to gain control of her body and mind from the ancient and powerful Forerunner.

This book is primarily an adventure story that wanders from one alien wonder to another, without really tying everything together into a neat, tidy plot. There is quite a bit of character development as Simsa struggles to somehow share her mind and body with the Forerunner. There is also a nice sub-theme of friendship as Simsa drags Thom out of one dilemma after another, even though she thinks she despises him.

But it's really hard to love a surly heroine with superhuman powers. These two Forerunner books will never be my favorite Nortons.

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4.0 out of 5 stars The continuing adventures of Simsa, December 23, 2007
Andre Norton has written many SF novels employing the theme of the Forerunners, an ancient race of space farers that disappeared (except for their artifacts) well before humanity took to the stars. Other books using this theme are "Sargasso of Space" (1955), "Exiles of the Stars" (1971), "Forerunner Foray" (1973), "Forerunner (1981), and "Moon Called" (1982).

In most of these novels, Norton describes the ancient Forerunner ruins as vast, underground high technology installations where ordinary human beings can be driven crazy just by the odd angles of the walls, the mazes and tunnels where they're always getting lost, or by the harmful emanations from the ancient and only partly understood machines.

However in "Forerunner" (1981) and "Forerunner: the Second Venture" (1985), Norton's Forerunners have gone beyond technology and into the realm of what we would call supernatural powers.

"Forerunner: the Second Venture" is a sequel to "Forerunner," and continues the story of Simsa, once a runner and fetcher for an old Burrow-dweller in the ancient port of Kuxortal, and now a reincarnated Forerunner with superhuman talents, including telepathy, the ability to channel killing forces through her sun-and-moon scepter, and the ability to tamper with other peoples' minds.

In "Forerunner," Simsa teamed up with the off-worlder Thom who came to Kuxortal in search of his missing brother. She and Thom survived many harrowing adventures together, and they seemed like good friends at the end of the book, but in this sequel Simsa suspects Thom of abandoning her to his fellow scientists. No one has ever met a living Forerunner, and Simsa finds herself an 'honored guest,' i.e. prisoner, on a starship where at least one of the scientists would like to have a go at dissecting her. She escapes from the starship, via its life boat which will automatically search out a planet where humans can, at the very least, breathe the atmosphere.

And that's exactly what the lifeboat finds: a planet where Simsa can breathe the air, but which otherwise seems inimical to life. She and her zorsal (think 'bat' with four feet and cute fern-like antennae) almost perish in a searing, rocky wasteland where the only thing that moves is an eerie river of sand.

Norton has invented some interesting aliens in 'The Second Venture.' There are the bad-smelling, octopus-like blobs that live in the rivers of sand, but there are also intelligent creatures in one secluded valley where Simsa finally stumbles upon food and water. Simsa must persuade the furry lobster-things that she too is intelligent and worthy of their respect. She must also do battle with the Forerunner who is co-inhabiting her body, and last but not least, find Thom who has crash-landed into one of the rivers of sand while searching for Simsa.

Norton's heroine is by turn sour, prickly, brave, and fiercely independent. She's hard to like, but it is easy to admire her, especially in her fight almost-to-the-death to gain control of her body and mind from the ancient and powerful Forerunner.

This book is primarily an adventure story that wanders from one alien wonder to another, without really tying everything together into a neat, tidy plot. There is quite a bit of character development as Simsa struggles to somehow share her mind and body with the Forerunner. There is also a nice sub-theme of friendship as Simsa drags Thom out of one dilemma after another, even though she thinks she despises him.

But it's really hard to love a surly heroine with superhuman powers. These two Forerunner books will never be my favorite Nortons.
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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Andre Norton's Forerunner series..., January 29, 2001
By 
icbleu "icbleu" (Lemon grove, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Forerunner: The Second Venture (Universe of Style) (Mass Market Paperback)
is an excellent read. With this book she continues the story begun in her other book titled: Forerunner. Engaging, and a very good read, Andre Norton keeps the pace up and the reader riveted until the last page. If you like Andre Norton's other works, I suggest purchasing this one too.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This was scraped land, laid bare to heat-roasted rock, lacking a single lift of withered leaf or stem to break the unending stretch of gray-blue stone seamed with darker cracks. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
furred ones, valley dwellers, flowing sand, sand stream, sand river, mind touch
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Elder One, Simsa of the Burrows, Great Memory, Life Boat, Burrows Simsa
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