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13 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of Poul Anderson's last stories,
By SlanFan (NC, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Hardcover)
Contrary to what an earlier reviewer said, the Poul Anderson story, "Pele" is not OLD. The first and third volumes in the M-K Wars series both had Anderson stories, but this is not one of those. The story previously appeared in an sf magazine (ANALOG, I think) about a year ago, but it is one of the last stories that Anderson wrote before his untimely death. Having corrected that misinformation, I'll say that no book with grand masters Anderson and Niven on board should be missed. And newer writers Chafe and Colebatch are no slouches either.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent book.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Hardcover)
I've read every book in the Man-Kzin wars and they just keep getting better with each book. I finished this last book within a couple of days and loved the detail and longer refferences to the kzin side of the story. I've noticed with each book there has been less war and more cooperation between humans and the kzin but that is because most of the kzin are being killed off with each war and the remaining ones are learning to think before they leap.:) I recommend this book to everyone.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Maintains and improves a great tradition,
By Susan Norton (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Hardcover)
All the Man-Kzin stories are teriffic and this does not disappoint. Taut action, real charcters and original ideas in all of them. Sad that the story Pele was one of the last by rhe late, great Poul Anderson. I would like to see more illustrations of the very exciting and often weird scense described - for example the confrontation between the old Kzin warrior Raargh and the human woman resistance fighter Jocelyn in the ruined sergeant's mess in His Sergeant's Honour and the desperate ploy of the kzin cub Vaemar to defuse the situation. More please, and soon!
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not bad...but not great either.,
By BobIV "rwfisheriv" (New Market, MD United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Hardcover)
In the growing collection of Man-Kzin War stories, this book doesn't reveal any new insights, revelations, or twists. It does contain some decent writing, though. A good weekend read; perhaps a paperback edition would be more appropriate.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Man Kzin IX,
By Disc Meister (Arlington TX) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Mass Market Paperback)
After a long hiatus from the Man-Kzin wars, I purchased the Man-Kzin Wars IX. The stories in M-K Wars IX were average at best. Of the 4 stories, the murder mystery was my favorite. The story about the crippled Kzin's last stand started well but deteriorated into a long-winded mutual admiration fest between the antagonists during the battle for Wunderland's liberation. It made as much sense as the Russians negotiating with and praising the positive qualities of the bunkered Germans during the battle for Berlin. The last story needed a good editor to clean it up, especially the beginning, and make it more coherent. IMO, this book is not worth buying and inferior to its predecessors.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Another good book in the series,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Mass Market Paperback)
While this is another good member of the series it is not quite as thought provoking as others with less technical innovation and science than earlier books in the series. However, I can't help admit I like them all.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Shaeffer at war?,
By
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Hardcover)
Some of the stories were kind of weak, but then this odd crashlander guyshows up. Finding out what happens to Beowulf Shaeffer post the Crashlander book made the book completly worthwhile. If you're not a Beowulf Shaeffer fan, you might not enjoy it as much.
5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A correction to the previous reviewer's ethics!,
By Susan Norton (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Mass Market Paperback)
I have reviewed this book previously but am having a second bite because I am annoyed by the conduct of the previous reviewer. He claims, apparently trying to dam the dialogue, there is a phrase: "As you known, Raargh Sergeant, we Wunderkzin ..." No such phrase occurs in the book. A human says to a Kzin born on Wunderland "We sometimes call you Wunderkzin ..." I suggest that if the reviewer wishes to pick holes in the style of a particular story he quote the actual words he complains of and not something he has invented. I believe this is related to a thing called ethics, you know, like honesty and truthfulness.And all thes stories in the book are teriffic! Scream and Leap!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fine col;lection by four great authors,
By Kevin Dunn (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Mass Market Paperback)
This has one of the great Poul Anderson's last stories in it, which wopuld alone be a sufficient reason to buy it, plus one by Niven himself. The others are by tried-and-tested favourite Man-Kzin authors Paul Chafe and Hal Colebatch. Between them they add up to a fine portrait of the complex human-Kzin interaction after the Kzinti have to try to come to terms with the fact that they can lose wars. In Anderson's Pele, they must acknowledge human superiority in space-craft. But can they? Like most of Anderson's stories, has a strong science as well as human element. In Hal Colebatch's "His Sergeant's Honour", the collection's strongest story, a battered old Kzin sergeant holds the last Kzin fort on Wunderland, a planet long occupied by the Kzinti but now re-conquered by humans, charged with guarding, among others, a human collaborator and a Royal kitten - Vaemar-Riit, last son of the great Chuut-Riit, who is destined to play a big part in "Music-Box" in Man-Kzin 10, "The Wunder War," and, I hope, in adventures to come. He is too good a charater to waste. In the meantime, old Raargh-Sergeant must choose between death and dishonour. Or Has it become dishonourable to choose death in this strange new time of Monkey victories? Windows of the Soul, also set in post-occupation Alpha Centauri, is a rather dark detective story in the Raymond Chandler Tradition. Best not say too much for fear of revealing the plot. Larry Niven's "Fly-by-Night" is a follow-on from Hal Colebatch's "Telepath's Dance" in Man-Kzin VIII - what happened ot the dewscendents of the first rogue telepath when he turned against the Patriarchy and threw in his lot with Selina Guthlac and the humans of the "Angel's Pencil"? All these stories are taut, pacy and well-written. The Kzinti, or somne of them. show they are more than just dumb killing-machines and are capable of thoughtfulness.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
man-kzin wars IX,
By
This review is from: Man-Kzin Wars IX (Mass Market Paperback)
received the book in very quick order, Have not finish others getting to that numbers. I try to read in order but book is in excellent condition. Received in a timely manner, thank you for speedy shipment.
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Man-Kzin Wars IX by Larry Niven (Mass Market Paperback - July 1, 2003)
$7.99
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