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Out of 18 stories. 2 are worth your time: a surprisngly engaging one about a young Kerensky and the other a wonderful Joanna story from Robert Thurston.

Honestly, I just could not get into many of the other stories. I tried. They're just all over the place. Even Blaine Pardoe's bit about the final moments of the Fedcom Civil War... sigh. Just a disappointing collection when you consider how many pieces of sourcebook fluff work well.
 
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Kavinay | Jan 2, 2023 |
Jasek Kelswa-Steiner. He's so dreamy. Every woman wants him.

Meanwhile, Tara Bishop dies off the page and we return to women pining for Jasek.

Blergh.

Hard to feel sympathetic for the Inner Sphere, unless that was the point?
 
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Kavinay | Jan 2, 2023 |
This author needs an English class. He can't put together sentences. The vast majority of this novel was written with sentence fragments. This made for some seriously jumpy reading.

I found this book difficult to read because of all the sentence fragments. At least one out of three sentences are fragmented throughout this novel (and the series). While I understand that the use of a sentence fragment can be effective when used sparingly, this author has written an entire trilogy comprised almost entirely of fragments!

Honestly, it makes the author look as though he has no command of the English language at all.

His Cimmerians wear ponchos, which seem wildly out of place for the culture, and the author misidentifies the Shemites as a black race. Twice in the trilogy he mentions the ebony skin of Belit - a woman Robert E. Howard described as having ivory skin.

The fragments really ruined the novel.
 
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VincentDarlage | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 30, 2015 |
I found this book difficult to read because of all the sentence fragments. At least one out of three sentences are fragmented throughout this novel (and the series). While I understand that the use of a sentence fragment can be effective when used sparingly, this author has written an entire trilogy comprised almost entirely of fragments!

Honestly, it makes the author look as though he has no command of the English language at all.

His Cimmerians wear ponchos, which seem wildly out of place for the culture, and the author misidentifies the Shemites as a black race. Twice in the trilogy he mentions the ebony skin of Belit - a woman Robert E. Howard described as having ivory skin.

The fragments really ruined the novel.
 
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VincentDarlage | Jan 30, 2015 |
Set in Cimmeria and closely following the setting established by Robert Howard in his Conan series, Loren had created a new Cimmerian hero, Kern who sets out to defend Cimmeria from invasion. He gathers several followers in his quest as he chases a small group holding prisoners.

Loren set out to create a character similar to Conan, this book did not feel that much like the original series. Conan was mostly a loner, occasionally gathering one or two friends for an adventure. Kern feels more like a leader of groups. His followers are more like members of his clan than his close friends. To me, that is a big difference.

The setting does feel like Conan's world. Conan is still alive, King of Aquilonia, and the characters frequently talk of his exploits. Even to the point of exaggerating their own adventures and retelling them as if performed by Conan. I found this fun.

The book has a lot of battles, described in moderate detail. It includes the supernatural and giants. Very much in the style of Howard.

The book was enjoyable, maybe I was expecting too much. Perhaps it if actually was Conan, I would have liked it more. I think Kern will grow on me. If you like the individual adventurer style of sword and sorcery, you should enjoy this book.
 
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Nodosaurus | 2 reseñas más. | May 26, 2014 |
I don't always have a lot of luck with anthologies and I tend to shy away from them for the most part. A friend was raving about how much she enjoyed this book and offered to send it to me when she finished. Jen in Alaska knows how I am about paranormal mysteries and knew I'd like the majority of the stories.
And she was right! I didn't find one weak story in the batch and I discovered some new-to-me authors who have been added to the watch list as well as being reminded of authors I've heard of but not read before now.
I don't know if I had a favorite in the batch, but some did stand out like Devon Monk's Sweet Smell of Cherries and Phaedra Weldon's Web Ginn House.
Five not all anthologies are this good beans....
 
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Squeex | Jun 28, 2010 |
Most of the stories in this book are so-so but some - including Theobrama by Diane Duane and No Rest for the Wicked by Mike Stackpole - are excellent.
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bluesalamanders | Apr 30, 2010 |
Where Ghost War served to introduce readers new and old to the current state of the BattleTech universe, A Call to Arms dives straight in, letting readers follow and try to catch their breath.

This approach mostly works, with Stackpole having set up much of the background for the reader in Ghost War. But some elements of BattleTech—mainly the Clans—went untouched in the prior book, and here Coleman uses them without much of an introduction.

But while A Call to Arms may be slightly confusing to a first-time reader, that's no obstacle to someone familiar with the universe. The book remained just as good as it did when I was a first-time reader; better, perhaps, now that I've seen the fates of some of these characters 20+ books down the line.

A Call to Arms, despite the name, is far more than a book of combat scenes. (If you want that, try Endgame.) Instead, Coleman spends much of the time developing the characters and the relationships between them. While the lines between "good guys" and "bad guys" and "worse guys" are fairly clearly drawn, he still takes the time to explore them and their motivations in depth. Even though it's hard to sympathize with Erik Sandoval-Groell and Star Colonel Torrent, it's no secret why they're acting the way they are.

A Call to Arms was a fun book to come back to, seeing just how much it sets up for other authors to play with down the line. While there's not much here for someone not interested in the BattleTech universe, it's definitely an interesting and essential book for someone who is.
 
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ATimson | Mar 12, 2008 |
Good use of Robert E. Howards world of Conan to create anohter enjoyable character in Kern. 1/2 Frost Giant and 1/2 Cimmerian makes for one hell of a barbarian. Kern and his foolowers soon grow to legend and this is where the series gets good, continuing in Volumes 2 and 3. The ending is somewhat predictable but ties up the book and leaves you eagerly awaiting the next character to come out of this revitalized world of Conan.
 
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egonzalez111 | 2 reseñas más. | Mar 20, 2007 |
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