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The Stars Down Under [Hardcover]

Sandra McDonald (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

Price: $24.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

March 18, 2008
Chief Terry Myell and Lieutenant Commander Jodenny Scott are in that most precarious of military situations, a mixed marriage. Enlisted and officer. It’s unnatural.
 
Terry and Jodenny have been assigned to duty on the planet Fortune, away from the huge ships that carry colonists from the wreckage of polluted Earth to clean new worlds across the galaxy.
 
But there’s another way besides spaceships to travel from world to world. A group within Team Space is exploring the Wondjina Spheres, a set of ancient alien artifacts that link places and times. Now those spheres have shut down and Team Space thinks that Terry and Jodenny are part of the key to make them work again —no matter how the two of them feel about it. They can volunteer, or be “volunteered.”
 
What the researchers can’t anticipate is that the status quo, in which Team Space holds the monopoly on travel between worlds, is about to change. And as a result, Terry and Jodenny will be tested to their limits and beyond….

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Military SF thriller, xeno-archeological adventure, interstellar romance and shamanistic vision quest combine in this ambitious but flawed sequel to 2007's The Outback Stars. Chief Petty Officer Terry Myell—whose taboo enlistee/officer marriage to Lt. Cmdr. Jodenny Scott has landed him a tedious desk assignment—is kidnapped and forced to join a mission seeking a group of researchers who disappeared while investigating a network of spherical gateways that allow almost instantaneous travel between the stars. Inexplicably, Myell is the only one who can get the system to work. As he and his captors explore strange worlds for signs of the missing scientists, they discover a hostile reptilian race bent on controlling the secrets to the gateways and wiping out anyone in their way. McDonald leaves substantial questions of crucial backstory unanswered, and the divergent plot lines laden with Australian Aboriginal myth and folklore references leave this sophomore effort disjointed. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“Likeable characters, excellent development, and a series of interlocking puzzles worked out against Australian culture that most Americans will find exotic. A smart, fun, read.” —David Drake on The Outback Stars
 
“The author shows intimate knowledge of the nuts and bolts of what really makes big ships tick…and the careful attention to the elements of Aboriginal culture makes this even more worthy of a reader’s time.” —Walter Hunt
 
“Strikingly realistic. The Outback Stars gives the genre of military SF a very hard shake indeed. Buy this book; I guarantee your sense of wonder will get a workout.” —James Patrick Kelly
 
“Sandra McDonald knows the Navy, what makes a ship run well and what can make it run badly. Lieutenant Jodenny Scott is the sort of tough, smart, but thoroughly human officer we’d all like alongside us in an emergency.” —John G. Hemry, Author of Against All Enemies and (as Jack Campbell) The Lost Fleet Dauntless, on The Outback Stars

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (March 18, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765316447
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765316448
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #439,816 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Original and Vivid Science Fiction, March 20, 2008
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This review is from: The Stars Down Under (Hardcover)
Science Fiction and Fantasy genres overlap in many ways, and none more clearly than in this second book in the series by Sandra McDonald's. The plot threads that I most strongly hoped she would develop from the first book, The Outback Stars, are the focus of this second novel in a series.

The story is a mosaic of hard science and myth, wonders and the ordinary, aliens and regular people. I love the way McDonald writes, a combination of matter-of-fact space travel and unexpected intrusions by powers beyond the control of any human being. I love the way her characters struggle to keep their plans and their lives on track in the midst of being thrust into events that change everything.

Reading McDonald, I sometimes have a sense of magical realism as done by Gaiman or by Charles de Lint. Once in a while the science under the phenomenon is revealed but most often we are left with tantalizing questions, which may or may not be answered farther along in the story.

I like the way McDonald wraps up the story threads in a satisfying conclusion, but still leaves enough openings for the next book. I suspect she could easily write the same novel in twice length and keep me interested. At 336 pages, The Stars Down Under was over too soon. There is no doubt I'll pre-order the next one in the series.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A followup to the first novel, with aliens and the Dreamtime, August 1, 2009
By 
Rebecca Huston "telynor" (On the Banks of the Hudson) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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After I had finished reading The Outback Stars by Sandra McDonald, I was very intent on finding the next book in the series. Set in the far future, where it's the Australians who make the leap into leading the space race and colonization of the galaxy, the story was a hard space opera. It had two likeable main characters, a realistic feel to the story, and took some tried and true formulas from science fiction and freshened them up with some new twists. Now the sequel is out in mass market paperback, and I settled in one afternoon to take it in.

The Stars Down Under picks up the tale of Lieutenant Jodenny Scott and Chief Terry Myell have married and are trying to settle in on the planet Fortune. He's been assigned to a school for training members of Team Space, and she is a sort of troubleshooter for the fleet. But neither of them are fitting in well. They have a problem with their different rank -- in the future it seems, relationships between enlisted and officer ranks are frowned upon -- and Terry's co-workers resent him mightily, despite his recieving a medal for valour.

Most of all, it seems that their encounter with the mysterious Wondjina Spheres, differing sized domes that appear in clusters of three on nearly every planet, hasn't been forgotten by Team Space. And despite their reluctance to be involved, both Jodenny and Terry are none-too-gently coerced into assisting a scientific team into finding out what happened to another team that vanished. Indeed, it's Terry who can activate the spheres and the ability to travel instantiously through space, and possibly time, which makes him a very valuable commodity....

Here the series makes a hard shift from straight up science fiction to a sort of space fantasy that blends futuristic travel with Australian Aboriginal culture and mythos. All sorts of creatures appear, from crocodiles that appear in the sky, racing through houses and in cave paintings, to a tribe on one planet that insists that Terry is the manifestation of a thunder god. It's interesting stuff, but...

And that's a pretty serious but here. Despite the interesting plot, despite the mix of ancient legends and lore into hard science fiction, I had a hard time wading through this book. As the scenery kept changing, and as Jodenny is by turns frustrated at the lack of help in finding her husband and sent off back to Earth on a secret mission disguised as a civilian librarian, I started to care less and less.

The writing is good, the style interesting, but when I got about two-thirds of the way through the book, I started to get bored and finding other things to do besides read. For me, that's the kiss of death for a novel. Usually books start off slowly, easing the reader into the tale after the initial surprise, but here the narrative starts off with a bang, and then moves slower and slower, with secondary characters that are either cardboard and dull or maniacal and unlikeable and dull.

While I do suggest that you've had read the previous novel in this series before taking on The Stars Down Under, and there is a third novel out in hardbound, this isn't one that I would suggest that you hurry out to find. If there's nothing else to read, or you really need a science fiction fix, it might do. But the downside is that it's such an average read, I can't honestly recommend it. That's too bad, as the elements of the story, especially the use of Australian culture and speech really does make this different than the usual run of the mill yarn.

An excerpt from the third novel, The Stars Blue Yonder is tucked in at the back of the paperback.

Three stars overall, not really recommended.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Second in an original and exciting series, May 14, 2008
This review is from: The Stars Down Under (Hardcover)
I have a fondness for space opera, and Sandra McDonald delivers the perfect blend of realistic space-faring military life, aliens, mythology and technology in THE STARS DOWN UNDER.

In her first novel we learned about the Wondjina Spheres, ancient alien artifacts that link time and space in a series of rings, allowing travel between worlds. Now the rings have shut down and Team Space thinks protagonists Terry Myell and Jodenny Scott had something to do with it. Co-opted against his will into reactivating the Wondjina Transportation System, Terry and his team meet up with an alien race who want to control the spheres just as badly as Team Space does. Jodenny is packed off to Earth on a nice long voyage to keep her from causing the military public relations problems, including going after her husband. Then things get really weird.

I liked this very much. It confidently mixes detailed, pragmatic military life with the mysticism of a universe containing a very real Rainbow Serpent. The tension of the separated Terry and Jodenny trying to deal with first contact, hallucinatory experiences, Aboriginal culture, alien artifacts, a maze of lies, difficult truths, and a desperate desire to find one another again kept me turning the pages. It doesn't stand alone, but it's a fascinating follow-up to THE OUTBACK STARS and I look forward to the next in the series.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Terry Myell drizzled oil on the vegetables in the wok, reached past his comm-bee for seasoning, and jumped back in surprise as a crocodile scurried through his kitchen. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
shark tooth, first egg, general quarters, crocodile ring, comm clicked, dilly bag, marsupial lions, missing team
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Team Space, Chief Myell, Captain Balandra, Mother Sphere, Supply School, Aral Sea, Commander Gold, Captain Kuvik, Commander Nam, Rainbow Serpent, Chief Elder, Seven Sisters, Commander Scott, Miss Spring, Sam Osherman, Great Egret, Senior Chief Talic, Adeline Oaks, Roon King, Malachy Balandra, Big Alcheringa, Little Alcheringa, Lieutenant Sweeney, Anna Gayle, Putty Romero
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