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Jean Lorrah
Jean Lorrah is the creator of the Savage Empire series and co-author of the Sime~Gen series created by Jacqueline Lichtenberg. She is also a screenwriter, with an optioned screenplay, Coal for Christmas, written with Lois Wickstrom. Be sure to look for her Nessie's Grotto books with Lois, and... show more

Jean Lorrah is the creator of the Savage Empire series and co-author of the Sime~Gen series created by Jacqueline Lichtenberg. She is also a screenwriter, with an optioned screenplay, Coal for Christmas, written with Lois Wickstrom. Be sure to look for her Nessie's Grotto books with Lois, and folk tale favorite Rooster Under the Table. Besides all that, Jean has a one-off vampire novel, Blood Will Tell.Jean specializes in Intimate Adventure, stories in which people with opposing points of view must resolve the conflict by working together, usually with lives at stake.
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Birth date: January 01, 1938
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Community Reviews
markk
markk rated it 7 years ago
After a crewmember is crippled in a battle with the Klingons Captain James Kirk takes the Enterprise to Vulcan, where an experimental treatment under development at the Vulcan Academy of Science promises to return him to health. Also undergoing the treatment is Spock's mother Amanda, who is sufferin...
Wyvernfriend Reads
Wyvernfriend Reads rated it 8 years ago
Worth reading the rantage for how things haven't changed in decades.Made me want to root out the Darkover books and re-read. I know Bradley has some problems and blindnesses but overall it's interesting and well worth a read.
nicky2910's book reviews
nicky2910's book reviews rated it 10 years ago
After a skirmish with a Klingon ship Kirk, McCoy and Spock accompany an injured crewman to Vulcan for a revolutionary medical treatment - a treatment which Spock's mother is undergoing at the same time. Problems arise when a third patient mysteriously dies... accident or sabotage? This novel was p...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it 11 years ago
No one will mistake this for great literature or great science fiction, so why rate it so high? Well, I was surprised at how well these held up. I haven't reread this for years--maybe decades. Yet I remember all the stories, some just from the title, others just a few paragraphs in, and that's rare ...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it 11 years ago
This is part of a series I loved in my teens that was published from the 1970s through the 1980s, and I don't believe any are in print. I find that a shame. Though I wouldn't count this a deathless science fiction classic featuring an awesome prose style such as that of say, Ursula LeGuin, it's one ...
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