Warchild
Winner of the second Warner Aspect First Novel Contest, this story of a young boy's coming of age amid interstellar war is a riveting saga in the tradition of Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game.
Winner of the second Warner Aspect First Novel Contest, this story of a young boy's coming of age amid interstellar war is a riveting saga in the tradition of Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game.
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Format: ebook
ISBN:
9780759527676 (0759527679)
Publish date: April 1st 2002
Publisher: Aspect
Pages no: 280
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Young Adult,
Science Fiction Fantasy,
Science Fiction,
Romance,
War,
Military,
Space Opera,
Aliens,
Glbt,
Queer,
M M Romance
Series: Warchild (#1)
I found "Warchild" because Tanya Huff recommended Karin Lowachee as one of her favourite science fiction writers. There's no audiobook version, the cover is depressingly generic and the title didn't speak to me. Normally I'd have moved on and then I'd have missed one of the most original, vivid and...
I found "Warchild" because Tanya Huff recommended Karin Lowachee as one of her favourite science fiction writers. There's no audiobook version, the cover is depressingly generic and the title didn't speak to me. Normally I'd have moved on and then I'd have missed one of the most original, vivid and...
I found "Warchild" because Tanya Huff recommended Karin Lowachee as one of her favourite science fiction writers. There's no audiobook version, the cover is depressingly generic and the title didn't speak to me. Normally I'd have moved on and then I'd have missed one of the most original, vivid and...
This novel is my second favorite read in 2015, brilliant plot development, careful and detailed world building without info-dumps, meaningful and deeply emotionally charged characters set off an exciting SciFi. This is a first novel I have read by Karin Lowachee and it won't be the last. I like her ...
My original, full(er) review for this book is at Hot Stuff for Cool People. This was one of those books that called to me. That doesn’t happen very often, and it’s kind of hard to describe. It’s like I had to get it and read it. I simply couldn’t not. And then, it probably should have been a lot h...