From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Christine C. Menefee, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good start to a new series,
By Barb Caffrey "writer-for-hire" (In a Midwest State (of mind), USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Trading in Danger (Hardcover)
TRADING IN DANGER is a very good read; it's compelling, it's interesting, has many plot elements, and has a likable protagonist. Ms. Moon did an excellent job with the military elements, as I've come to expect over the years of reading her books; she was a military officer, and her analysis and understanding of military matters is spot on.
Thing is, Kylara Vatta's character definitely is that of a maverick wunderkind, which reminds me a bit of the Moon-Anne McCaffrey collaboration SASSINAK, at least of the stuff while Sassinak is young. That's not bad, mind; I enjoyed SASSINAK, and I enjoyed this, too (and the characters really aren't much alike, except for being smart women who've found a way to survive). Nor is this the female version of Miles Vorkosigan, either; Kylara Vatta is not a cell-damaged man stuck in a military society, and I didn't think much about the possible parallels to Lois McMaster Bujold's THE WARRIOR'S APPRENTICE until the book was over. Trust me; the books aren't that much alike, and I don't think TRADING IN DANGER is a copy of anything. The only current book I can think of that's anything like this one is Steve Miller and Sharon Lee's BALANCE OF TRADE, although that's not very close, either; still, both TRADING IN DANGER and BALANCE OF TRADE show people making a living by trade and enjoying it. I do think if you liked BALANCE OF TRADE, you should like TRADING IN DANGER as well. The pluses of this book? It has a very strong female heroine who is self-willed and highly motivated, even if she does get down on herself reasonably often (as young adults often do; sometimes even us older ones). I liked the trade, and the military action, and most of the minor characters (especially the woman from the ISC; her line about "not apologizing for not meeting your prejudices" -- paraphrase mine -- because she was a military vet who dressed in a feminine way really tickled me). And it really was a page-turner. The minuses? Some of the sub-plots were started and stopped, some for comic effect, some perhaps because there was no room for them here. And I'd have preferred to see a few less people saying how wonderful Kylara was/is; yes, I expect it from her father and some of the others, but a little goes a long way. I'd rather intuit that sort of thing by Kylara's actions, and I'd already made up my mind that she was, in the parlance of this book, "a good'un." So is this a perfect book? No. Is it Ms. Moon's best book? Probably not. Does it measure up to other space adventures Ms. Moon has written? Yes. Four stars. Recommended. Barb Caffrey
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Below her usual, still above most everyone else,
By
This review is from: Trading in Danger (Hardcover)
Having read Moon's "Deed of Paksenarion" trilogy, "Remnant Population", "The Speed of Dark" and some of her short stories, this was - something of a disapointment. The main character is irritating, in some ways; the actions and thoughts of everyone around her are overly focused on her. This may be an author's way of emphasizing what an extrordinarry person she is not through her own words but through the thoughts of others; if this is so then it's overkill and boggs down what it's supposed to help. She's yet another adventuresome girl with military training from a rich family who has "destined for great adventure" written all over her, in size 72 bold font. This isn't so much a story in it's own right as it is a prelude to the story of this girl's life, off in space with her own ship to adventure. Still, it's Elizabeth Moon, and I'll read the next books and follow her adventures. It's bound to get better, and I've certainly read many worse.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent new space opera from Elizabeth Moon,
This review is from: Trading in Danger (Hardcover)
This the first book of the Vatta space opera series. Kylara Vatta is a young woman from a rich shipping family who gets booted out a military academy, so her father assigns her the captancy of an old space freighter that needs to be piloted to a distant scrap yard. Naturally, things don't go according to plan....Yes, there are a lot of simlarities between this book and the author's Serrano/Esmay books, but there are also enough differences to keep it interesting. I would say that the tone of this book is slightly more realistic and less warm/fuzzy than the Esmay books. I really like some of the unique personal issues that Kylara struggles with, and it's clear that Kylara is pursuing a very different course than the one Esmay Suiza took. I also like the fact that this book has a solid ending that doesn't leave you hanging. No series cliff-hangers here!
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