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Cargando... In the Green Stars Glowpor Lin Carter
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Originally posted at FanLit. Come visit us! http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/in-the-green-stars-glow/ Finally, our hero Karn, the crippled Earthman whose soul has been implanted in the body of a boy on a planet under a green star, comes to the end of his grand adventure. He has been through a series of harrowing events while trying to save the princess he has fallen in love with. In this last installment, he gets a short rest and then everything comes to a head. Old enemies resurface, new monsters appear and, perhaps most challenging of all, he??s captured by a band of man-hating teenage girls. Meanwhile, KarnÂ??s allies are dealing with a race of hive-minded warrior ants and Â?? would you believe it? Â?? another evil scientist (actually, he was my favorite part of the book). It canÂ??t possibly be a spoiler to say that everything eventually turns out okay in the end. In the Green StarÂ??s Glow is a fast read and, if youÂ??ve enjoyed the GREEN STAR books so far, you wonÂ??t be disappointed. Basically, itÂ??s more of the same except that this time it ends. As usual, the narrative is overly dramatic, often repetitive (how many times must each female be described as Â??litheÂ? and Â??suppleÂ?Â?) and sometimes just plain laughable. HereÂ??s a particularly dreadful example, when Karn is a slave to a 13-year-old female who, he notices, is looking at him lustily: I had been at work for about an hour and my naked hide glistened with perspiration which ran in long wet rivulets down my belly and thighs, cutting paths through the bark dust. The daylight gleamed in highlights along the raised ridges of the muscles of my legs and the great thews which swelled upon my back and shoulders. Each time I drew erect and lifted the heavy axe above my head, my powerfully developed pectoral muscles stood forth in sharp relief and the corded muscles of my taut midsection grew rock-ribbed and hardÂ?? I did not like the languid glow in her eye, nor the way she moistened her lips with the small pointed tip of her soft pink tongue. I opened my mouth, about to protestÂ?? Not thatÂ??s just really bad writing, but I chose to laugh at it and be entertained. At the same time, I found it kind of creepy that Lin Carter, who was over 40 when he wrote this, would think that a 13-year-old girl who has just run away from a gang of men who were abusing her, would be turned on by a sweaty axe-wielding man. Also, I think Carter forgot here that KarnÂ??s body is only about 13 or 14 years old. IÂ??ve never seen Â??great thewsÂ? on a boy that age. And the protesting part? The gentleman doth protest too much, methinks. What I did like about GREEN STAR was CarterÂ??s lush and beautiful world where the people live in cities built on the limbs of huge trees and fear to explore the forest floor. Our hero never discovers whether the trees and insects are magnified compared to Earth, or whether the people are smaller than humans. Though we see plenty of the Green Star world during the course of the series, it loses a little of its luster after the third book. The fourth book feels like Carter is just milking it, but this last book is a decent, if completely predictable, ending. If you like these sorts of male-oriented pulpy adventures in the style of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and if you find these novels cheap somewhere (I read the audio versions by Wildside Press which are pretty inexpensive), you may find it worthwhile to read the first three GREEN STAR books at least. Book 5 in the Green Star series. Follows As The Green Star Rises. "CLIMAX OF PERIL "He was Karn, the savage of the sky-high trees. He was protector and defender of the princess Niahm, whose very city was lost in tghe mapless jungles of the world under the Green Star. But he was also an Earthling, whose helpless body lay in suspended animation in New England. It was his alien mind that drove Karn through perils that no other would dare. "But dare he must - for though that alien planet was replete with dangers and treachery, with lost castels of forgotten science and armies of mindless monsters, there was a cause to be won and a love to be rescued. "It's Lin Carter in the grand climax of his best marvel-adventure series in the tradition of Burroughs and Merritt." The final book in the 'Green Star' series and Carter plods along throwing in every idea he can think of but it's hard to resist the notion that he's grown tired of the series and is continuing more from contractual obligation than inspiration. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
He was Karn, the savage of the sky-high trees. He was protector and defender of the princess Niamh, whose very city was lost in the mapless jungles of the world under the Green Star.But he was also an Earthling, whose helpless body lay in suspended animation in a guarded mansion in New England. It was his alien mind that drove Karn through perils that no other wold dare...In the Green Star's Glow is a science fantasy novel in the tradition of Edgar Rice Burroughs. Written by American author Lin Carter, it is the final book in his Green Star series. It was first published in 1976. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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The narrating protagonist Karn fell into the clutches of a misandrist tribe of girls who abused him at length, catering no doubt to certain readers. This plotline led to a penultimate moment of farce when he was discovered by Niamh as he deigned to give the teenage amazon Varda a kiss after his many prior refusals. Although the rather lascivious treatment of the extreme youth of the characters has been a persistent feature of these books, it really stood out in this one.
The book is furnished with an appendix itemizing and detailing principal "People of the Green Star World," which repeats and extends for this fifth book a similar feature of the third. Besides the fact that it is set at the end of the book with no calls forward to it earlier in the text, the thumbnail descriptions here seem to be of little actual use to readers. It shows some lack of confidence on the part of Carter (or his editor) that the characters have been drawn strongly enough for the reader to keep them distinct.
The illustrations and cover art are by the excellent fantasy artist Michael Whelan, who would go on a short while later to do a series of wonderful paintings for the covers of a new paperback edition of the Barsoom books. The four interior illustrations are in a pointillistic style, and all the art considerably surpasses what Roy Krenkel had supplied in the earlier Green Star volumes.