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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An outstanding sequel . . ., May 17, 2010
. . . to "The January Dancer" -- and a terrific story in its own right. As I've indicated in other reviews of Michael Flynn's novels, he writes Story -- in the best possible sense of the word. His writing is intense and tightly written, and honestly, not for the faint of heart. If you're going to invest time in a Michael Flynn novel, you need to be prepared to "get into" his world.
"Up Jim River" picks up where "The January Dancer" leaves off, with the Harpist and the Scarred Man once again playing prominent roles -- only now, the story is in "real-time" and not told in the flashback of the previous book. The novel answers several questions deliberately left unanswered in "The January Dancer" only to ask several more (one of which being this: Will there be more volumes to follow?) One can only hope that the answer to that question is "YES"!
No spoilers -- but one teaser! Readers of "The January Dancer" have wondered if the novel was set in the same "Universe" as Flynn's four-volume "Firestar" series -- only thousands of years in the future. The answer is "yes" -- and the avid Flynn reader will appreciate discovering this fact.
A truly tremendously enjoyable read. I highly recommend this book.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
entertaining search and rescue mission science fiction thriller, April 17, 2010
The Kennel of the United League of the Periphery assigns top Hound Bridget ban to obtain an artifact on the frontier planet Dangchao Waypoint that allegedly will help them remain safe in their galactic war against their enemy the Confederate of Central Worlds. Bridget ban knows the Confederacy will go all out to possess or destroy the artifact. Arriving on the planet, she begins the dangerous trek up river only to vanish. The Kennel conducts a quick inquest before deciding all beginnings and endings are with Jehovah; as Bridget ban obviously is.
Outraged with the instant official write off of her mother, who was a loyal hound, Bridget's daughter Mearana rejects the notion that her mom is dead. Mearana decides to rescue her mom, but knows she needs professional help so she chooses her mom's former lover, Donovan, who is insane so Mearana believes he might agree to do the job with her at his side; though he also could get them killed as the Confederacy Those of Name tortured him into seven distinct personalities. He agrees to take her to Dangchao Waypoint along the river of death.
Returning to the far future universe of The January Dancer, Michael Flynn provides an entertaining search and rescue mission science fiction thriller as the location of a remote lethal sector of the human dominated galaxy comes across as powerfully vivid. Enhancing time and place is almost mythological use of references and "archaic" vernacular dating back to twentieth and twenty-first century earth that focuses on a presupposition of knowledge and understanding of previous civilizations. More traditional in outlook than its predecessor, Up Jim River comes across more like a series of TV episodes along the line of Lost or 24, but with an unhinged hero. Readers will enjoy this fast-paced S&R quest on a planet filled with wilds.
Harriet Klausner
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good story set in an intriguing universe, July 23, 2011
Such a good story. Even better than the starter, The January Dancer, it's the sequel to. I got a little tired of the byplay of Donovan's multiple personalities, but there turned out to be a meaningful point to them, after all. Flynn's universe is always intriguing. The idea that millions of descendants of colonists from Earth would have mixed up their races, ethnic groups and even their languages to the point of near unintelligibly (until you stumble over phonetic insights such as the Murkans and the Yurpans) after a thousand years is intriguingly plausible. Although why they all choose, amusingly, to pretend to be Irish (except for the fact that the author is) is unclear. The ending is worth the price of admission all by itself.
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