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Stargate Atlantis: Homecoming: SGA-16 Mass Market Paperback – January 16, 2011
| Price | New from | Used from |
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUNKNO
- Publication dateJanuary 16, 2011
- Dimensions4.25 x 0.78 x 6.99 inches
- ISBN-101905586507
- ISBN-13978-1905586509
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Product details
- Publisher : UNKNO; 1st edition (January 16, 2011)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1905586507
- ISBN-13 : 978-1905586509
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.25 x 0.78 x 6.99 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,068,088 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,335 in TV, Movie & Game Tie-In Fiction
- #4,970 in War & Military Action Fiction (Books)
- #18,179 in Science Fiction Adventures
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Melissa Scott was born and raised in Little Rock, Arkansas, where she discovered science fiction as the direct result of breaking her arm during junior high gym class. She was banished to the library, and there the assistant librarian suggested she might enjoy “what’s his name, Heinlein - or that Andre Norton guy.” He was right. She devoured everything available at school, and then discovered the collection created by the Little Rock Public Library’s À Son Goût Trust, which had been established to purchase “books people like to read” — SF, fantasy, and Westerns
Scott studied history at Harvard College, where she was involved with the now-defunct college-sanctioned SF ‘zine that spawned the Harvard/Radcliffe Science Fiction Association, and was introduced to a new round of SF, particularly media SF — like Dr. Who — that had been unavailable in her home town. After graduation, she was admitted to Brandeis University’s comparative history program, and also sold her first novel, The Game Beyond, quickly becaming a part-time graduate student and an — almost — full-time writer. She earned her PhD from Brandeis with a dissertation titled “The Victory of the Ancients: Tactics, Technology, and the Use of Classical Precedent.”
Over the next twenty years, she published eighteen original novels and a handful of short stories, as well as tie-in novels for both Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Proud Helios) and Star Trek: Voyager (The Garden). She won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1986, and won Lambda Literary Awards in 1994 for Trouble And Her Friends, 1995 for Shadow Man, and again in 2001 for Point of Dreams, the last written with long-time partner and collaborator, the late Lisa A. Barnett. Scott has also been short-listed for the Tiptree Award, and won a Spectrum Award for Shadow Man.
During Barnett’s struggle with breast cancer, and for several years after her death in 2006, Scott focused on short fiction. She returned to longer work in the summer of 2009, when good friend and fellow writer Jo Graham invited her to participate in a new project: Legacy, an eight-book series of tie-in novels for Stargate: Atlantis, to begin where the fifth season had ended. Scott was immediately hooked by the idea, and she, Graham, and Amy Griswold completed the project with the release of Stargate Atlantis: The Third Path. Scott and Graham also began a new series of adventure novels, The Order of the Air, set in the 1930s, featuring aviation, magic, and secrets hidden in plain sight. Scott and Griswold also teamed up for fantasy novels Death By Silver and A Death at the Dionysus Club, which are gay Victorian murder mysteries with magic (or fantasies with murder). Scott and Griswold won another Lambda Literary Award for Death By Silver. Scott has also returned to the world of Astreiant to continue the acclaimed Points series, and is continuing her original science fiction and fantasy.
Scott currently lives in North Carolina, where her living room overlooks a pond filled with alarmingly active and carnivorous turtles.

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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on February 6, 2023
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 6, 2023
But these books are so carefully conceived, I soon had no problem transporting into their universe and devouring them page by page, all six of them!
Here's why you should read these books if you're a Stargate fan:
- There's an arc encompassing all 6 of them, and there are several smaller arcs for each one. It's a hexalogy, in the same way that LOTR is a trilogy.
- Each character is carefully contoured and represented. Even minor ones. Every detail that 38 minutes on TV were not enough for has found home here.
- Characters that are less starry but much loved by fans are given plenty of screen time. If you liked Major Lorne or dr. Zelenka, you'll have your share of them.
- The books are really progressively getting better. Each one is a nicer read than the previous -- and the first is quite good to start with.
- The authors have done their homework extremely well. Not only have they researched the show thoroughly, often making quite obscure references to events all throughout the 15 years of SG history, but there is much military, medical, aeronautical, psychological, astronavigational, philological, philosophical and theological realism in the entire text.
- The stories are good. The overall arc outcome is largely predictable, but the idea itself is certainly good. There are many other stories, small or large, and even some false starts, that are very enjoyable to follow. They are what keep you turning page after page. These are the type of stories that Joe Mallozzi should wish he had come up with -- and if he had, perhaps the show would still be running today.
- Shifting perspective. You'll find not only Atlantis arcs, but great Wraith stories, Genii viewpoints or Satedan intermezzos. Other than the main antagonist -- who might have been better served by a more poignant representation -- everyone has a vivid life and the reader cares about them all. There are no minor characters in these books.
- Clever solutions. Show fans are bothered by inconsistencies or realism issues that sometimes crept into the TV scripts. These books try to patch up many of them, inventing intelligent backgrounds that give sense to things. Even the obnoxious "universal English" issue is worked around, not by means of an awkward explanation, but by smartly using it as a small plot device a number of times.
- Comedy. Humour is produced using the same methods as in the TV show, which is more than good enough. There aren't any slapstick jokes and pies flying around, but subtle puns mostly addressed to the true SG fan.
- Drama. There are questions that the books create, that the reader simply can't imagine being answered in any specific way. Second to action, being genuinely curious to see what the answer will be is a great page turning incentive.
- Action. It's there, all right. Action is utterly cinematic and visual; most of the last book is nothing but pulse-raising action. It's complex without being confusing, you never forget who's doing what, and it helps the general narrative rather than impending it (as it unfortunately was in some TV episodes).
The only thing I didn't like: a number of spelling mistakes (at least in the Kindle edition), and bad Czech.
I started reading these books on my Kindle / phone to pass time on a long flight; by the sixth book, I found myself turning pages at 1 after midnight or even while walking on the street. I can honestly say that I liked them more than the actual TV show.
.... As for various relationships between characters, I think a lot of folks tend to remember the show as a single sequence, like watching one big movie, when in fact, it was episodic. I think people tend to forget the many relationships that developed and then faded over the course of the five year run of the show. In fact, I do not believe the John and Teyla connection was ever meant to be anything more than a teaser to hold viewers. Script writers do not like to tie major characters together like that. It limits dramatic story telling options. Usually you only see that as shows end.
.... The only reason this review has four and not five stars was an annoying habit by the authors to not delineate scene changes with a blank line space between paragraphs where major changes in POV occurred. To be reading one scene and in the very next paragraph find yourself reading about totally different characters in a different locale without any warning is very disconcerting. It DOES take you out of the story when you have to stop and back up to double check what just happened. I don't believe this is an accident as it happens too often. I think it was a stylistic choice by the authors. Bad Move, if it was. The only other possibility is a formatting error that was not caught. I read 'Homecoming' on Kindle for PC software and it is possible that the line feeds ARE there and just did not show up in my copy. If that is true and other readers did not see this problem, please make comments to that effect on this review. I wouldn't want to discourage fans of the show from buying this fine story if their platform will not even manifest such a problem. If it IS a style choice, I urge the authors/publishers to correct it. It would make for a much smoother reading experience.
.... In conclusion, I was happy with the product overall. I generally do not read novelizations of TV shows, but I had particularly liked 'Stargate Atlantis'. I thought I might be taking a gamble paying even $4.99 for what might just be a hack job, but I got my money's worth. In fact, the bottom line is that I have just spent another $4.99 on Stargate Atlantis: The Lost, book two of the series, despite the possibility of minor reading annoyances. I have confidence that I will enjoy it as well. I'll let you know when I am done.
Top reviews from other countries
I skipped every single one of them to finish Book One of the Legacy Series...
Damn you Sci-Fi Urges/Teenage Years watching anything Stargate most days I came home from School!
Regardless of that little rant beforehand, this book is a good set up of what would have been (in my eyes) the official *Sixth Season of Atlantis* if it had ever graced our Television Screens when it signed off a decade ago now!
This is a start so far, Atlantis returns to Pegasus but getting the go ahead from the Bureaucrats on Earth was never gonna be plain sailing of course (I've never liked the IOA).
Once the team is back to help the Citizens of Pegasus who have been left to fend for themselves at the hands of a menacing new Wraith Queen called Death its all storylines (Sora of the Genii is back plus more of how the Wraith work as a Society) put in to place for what will be an exciting 8-Part series I am gonna get well & truly addicted to for sure.
Book Two is ordered as we speak...
I now need to purchase all the other books in the series to find out Dr Rodney McKay's fate, as he is my favourite character. The story is entertaining from start to finish and keeps you on the edge of your seat, not knowing if the Genii are going to double cross you or not.
If only all the other books in "The Legacy" series were not just available on ebooks, from my initial investigations into purchasing further books in the series on paperback. We do not all have Kindle or other forms of ebooks. I have had to purchase the paperback format for book 3 from the USA direct from Fandemonium Books.
If all the other books in this Legacy series are as good as the first two, then I will happily purchase them as well, one way or another, funds permitting.
1 ) Start by watching the full series, this really picks up after series 5 of Atlantis finishes up.
2 ) Helps if you have seen SG1.
3 ) You are probably going to want to read the full series, that's all six books, just letting you know as each book ends in a cliffhanger of sorts and you will want to continue.
4 ) All six books are now available.
5 ) Sometimes the language is a wee bit off, but it shouldn't take away from your overall enjoyment of the series.
So with all of that in mind. Do enjoy.
The standard of spelling, punctuation and grammar are atrocious.
The story jumps from character and plot without warning.
No new paragraphs or page breaks to let you know the narrative has changed.
You’re reading and suddenly you think what the heck?
You have to flip back a page to realise the story has jumped from Rodney MacKay on Atlantis being the protagonist to a Genii character on another planet.
Without any line breaks or spaces.
The author needs some writing tips from George R R Martin about how to manage several character stories at once.







