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Irresistible Forces por Jo Beverley
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Irresistible Forces (2004 original; edición 2004)

por Jo Beverley (Autor), Lois McMaster Bujold (Autor), Mary Jo Putney (Autor), Catherine Asaro (Autor), Jennifer Roberson (Autor)1 más, Deb Stover (Autor)

Series: The Guardian ("Alchemical Marriage", # 2.5), Sherwood {Jennifer Roberson} (includes 'Shadows in the Woods' (sequel)), Skolian Empire Chronological Order ("Stained Glass Heart" 2223)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
5981239,590 (3.18)10
New York Times bestselling authors Mary Jo Putney, Jo Beverley, and Lois McMaster Bujold join forces with award-winning authors Catherine Asaro, Jennifer Roberson, and Deb Stover in this all-new anthology of original stories proving that love can conquer all...even the boundaries of time and space. From sixteenth-century Britain to the farthest reaches of outer space, from medieval adventures to tales of inter-galactic love, here is a compilation that explores the wonderfully kinetic forces that lovers share--forces too great to resist...… (más)
Miembro:OhDhalia13
Título:Irresistible Forces
Autores:Jo Beverley (Autor)
Otros autores:Lois McMaster Bujold (Autor), Mary Jo Putney (Autor), Catherine Asaro (Autor), Jennifer Roberson (Autor), Deb Stover (Autor)
Información:NAL Trade (2004), Edition: 1ST, 400 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca, Actualmente leyendo, Lista de deseos, Por leer, Favoritos
Valoración:****
Etiquetas:Ninguno

Información de la obra

Irresistible Forces [Anthology 6-in-1] por Catherine Asaro (Editor) (2004)

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Mostrando 1-5 de 12 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
{Anthology; fantasy/ science fiction, romance, female writers} (2004)

i) Winterfair Gifts by Lois McMaster Bujold

Told from Armsman Roic's perspective, Miles and Ekaterina are about to get married in a small ceremony (only 150 guests, including the emperor and empress of Barrayar) at the winter solstice and receive wedding gifts from their many friends who cannot attend.

A short story in the Vorkosigan saga (occurring after the butter bug incident) and excellent, as usual. I really enjoyed seeing many of the characters that Lord Miles Vorkosigan/ Admiral Naismith have encountered over the years again including, and especially, Sergeant Taura. Somehow, though, I felt the writing style was not as smooth as her usual though the story was up to standard.

4****

ii) An Alchemical Marriage by Mary Jo Putney

Isabel de Cortes and Scotsman Sir Adam Macrae join forces to create a sorcerous storm to save England from the Spanish Armada in 1588.

Interesting idea but this story felt too rushed, as though the short story format compressed it too much. And I was rather worried that the lady's feelings weren't getting enough consideration, up until the end.

2.5***

iii) Stained Glass Heart by Catherine Asaro

What should Vryl do when it comes to deciding between interstellar duty and his first love?

Asaro has created an intriguing planet which has been terraformed but with alien fauna and flora (some bioengineered) which, much like Barrayar in the first story of this collection, is more concerned with planetary than galactic affairs.

Reed-grasses rippled around him, the translucent tubes sparkling like glass but bending easily, supple and soft. Iridescent spheres no larger than his thumb topped many of the stalks and floated off their moorings when he brushed by. The drifting bubbles marked his path through the plains. …
He tilted his head up, letting sunlight bathe his face. Two gold suns hung in a lavender sky, side by side right now, shaped more like eggs than spheres, and speckled with dark spots.


I think I'll look for more of her work - though I was disappointed with the choices her character made in this story, in the end.

ETA: I see this falls within her Skolian Empire series, 7th in the chronological order.

3-3.5****

iv) Skin Deep by Deb Stover

Similar premise to the film R.I.P.D.; it starts in Heaven with Nick Riley being given a chance to return to Earth in a different body to put right the mistakes he made in life and set his wife's future back on track. Fun.

3.5-4****

v) The Trouble with Heroes by Jo Beverley

When refugees from Earth found Gaia, it was perfect and didn’t need to be terraformed. Instead of technology they had fixers, people who used magic to heal, to mend, to fix. But maybe Gaia was too perfect - and when something started attacking humans, they rediscovered the word ‘refugees’. Only fixers could help them but even their magic wasn’t enough … unless they tapped wild magic. Jen’s friend, Dan, was a fixer but would using wild magic change him?

I love the way they use old films to learn about Earth

“Talking of hurling cows,” she interjected, “do you still show that film? The grail one. Though I suppose they were hurling cows from inside.”
“Monty Python and the Holy Grail?” Polly said. “Of course. It’s a key work to understanding ancient Earth warfare.”


(And, naturally, they find the definition of ‘Monty’ in The Full Monty)

3.5***

vi) Shadows in the Woods by Jennifer Roberson

A story of some of the legendary heroes of Britain, continuing on from her Lady of the Forest and Lady of Sherwood books, according to the end notes.

3.5****

(February 2022)
Averaging: 20-21/6=3.33-3.5 stars ( )
  humouress | Feb 17, 2022 |
This book contains:

"Winterfair Gifts" by Lois McMaster Bujold. The reason I read this book. I always love returning to Bujold's Vorkosigan series, but this, like the last several novels, felt a bit slack to me. Miles's marriage is the background to Armsman Roic's love affair with Taura. Despite poison and intrigue, the plot never had the sense of urgency that used to make me tear through these books. Instead, it kinda felt like Bujold was wrapping up her time with the series by pairing the last spare characters off.

"The Alchemical Marriage" by Mary Jo Putney. Two mages have to work together to prevent the Spanish Armada from invading England. In so doing they join their hearts, their magic, and their ~bodies~. Purple prose, silly plot.

"Stained Glass Heart" by Catherine Asaro. Yet more purple prose and silly plot, but at least it's a twist on that old tune, the arranged marriage: to ensure his family's success, would-be dancer Vyrl is engaged to the Matriarch of Majda, but loves a simple farm girl he grew up with. The Matriarch is an experienced woman, older and wiser than Vyrl; although it's an arranged match, she hopes they'll grow to like each other in time. Which woman will Vyrl choose? Not that I gave a crap, but he chooses the girl described as having "waist-length curls flying in the wind, streaming around her, shiny and red-bronze, touched with gold sun-streaks." (She also has violet eyes, naturally.) He and his luvah experience no hardships for dissing a powerful leader of a planet, and instead get an epilogue about all their babies. Blegh.

"Skin Deep" by Deb Stover. A ghost is given one last chance to get into heaven: get his ex-wife to fall in love with her old boyfriend. Apparently the ghost had framed the boyfriend as a cheater, thus getting the girl. In the guise of a hot lady, the ghost pushes his ex-wife into the path of the boyfriend she should have stayed with. There's a subplot about the boyfriend being a DEA agent, but it feels pretty unnecessary. I don't really know what I was supposed to think about this story: was I supposed to care about the selfish ghost character? The bland ex-wife or blander boyfriend? Another slog.

"The Trouble with Heroes" by Jo Beverly. On an alien planet, people with extra powers are named "Fixers" and tasked with everything from healing to preventing alien incursions. Then a lady falls in love with a Fixer and finds out that a lot of people have a tiny amount of Fixing power, and that they can all work together to make the world a better place. I guess? I started skimming this about 10 pages in; it felt very scattered.

"Shadows in the Wood" by Jennifer Roberson. Merlin emerges from a tree and asks Marion and Robin Hood to help him return Excalibur to its rightful place. Fans of the Mists of Avalon and that kind of pagan fantasy would undoubtedly appreciate this a good deal more than I did. I thought it clunky and artless.

A surprisingly uninspired, uninspiring collection, overall. ( )
1 vota wealhtheowwylfing | Feb 29, 2016 |
Like many other readers, I bought this book for 'Winterfair Gifts'. It was worth it for that alone. The other stories were a mixed bag. There were two that I was unable to finish, one that I managed to read all the way (by Jo Beverley), but still found immensely irritating for that dated/cliched use of English English that exists only among American writers.

Jennifer Roberson (another American writer) did a much better job of setting a story with English characters and I quite enjoyed her Robin Hood/Marian story.

Catherine Asaro's story was enjoyably as well, in spite of feeling as though it was set in 'My Little Pony' land.

Looking at the writer blurbs after completing the book, I concluded that the stories I liked were written by the three fantasy writers who also enjoy romance, and the three I didn't care for were written by romance writers who were attempting fantasy stories. ( )
1 vota JudithProctor | Nov 18, 2010 |
I bought this for Lois McMaster Bujold's "Winterfair Gifts", and I'm glad that was so good since the other stories were poor. But Bujold's story was a delight, and worth the price of admission. ( )
  Altariel | Jun 4, 2008 |
The first story in this series overshadowed all the rest for me but then again I'm a Lois McMaster Bujold fan and any extra story in Miles' world is a good thing. This is a story of Taura who attends Miles' wedding and Roic who learns that appearance isn't everything.

The Alchemical Marriage by Mary Jo Putney is an interesting story of two magicians who have to work together to save England from the Spanish Armada. Pretty predictable but not a bad story and I really did care for the characters.

Catherine Asaro's Stained Glass Heart is set in her Skolian Empire world and is a story of one of the sons of Kurj and Roca and his choice between the Empire and love.

Skin Deep by Deb Stover is a fun story of the afterlife and an angel who gets something he didn't expect when he goes to help his ex-girlfriend find love.

The Trouble with Heroes by Jo Beverly is a story that just didn't resonate with me. It's a story of human contact with a people they really don't understand and how that mis-understanding causes serious trouble.

Shadows in the Wood by Jennifer Roberson is a very interesting Robin Hood story. Concentrating more on Marian than Robin and including Merlin it sounds at first like it could be overdone but it's well handled.

Overall it's not a bad set of stories but really didn't gel as a set of stories like many other sets of stories like this. A book to dip into between other books. ( )
2 vota wyvernfriend | Sep 18, 2007 |
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» Añade otros autores (1 posible)

Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Asaro, CatherineEditorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Beverley, JoContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Bujold, Lois McMasterContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Catherine AsaroContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Putney, Mary JoContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Roberson, JenniferContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado
Stover, DebContribuidorautor secundariotodas las edicionesconfirmado

Pertenece a las series

The Guardian ("Alchemical Marriage", # 2.5)
Sherwood {Jennifer Roberson} (includes 'Shadows in the Woods' (sequel))
Skolian Empire Chronological Order ("Stained Glass Heart" 2223)
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To the dancers and teachers of The Ballet Theatre of Maryland for their expertise, kindness, insights and most of all for helping a starry-eyed young girl reach for her dreams.
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Stories in anthology:

Winterfair Gifts by Lois Master Bujold
Alchemical Marriage by Mary Jo Putney
Stained Glass Heart by Catherine Asaro
Skin Deep by Deb Stover
The Trouble with Heroes by Jo Beverly
Shadows in the Wood by Jennifer Roberson

Please do not combine the single-title books
Winterfair Gifts OR The Trouble with Heroes with this anthology.

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New York Times bestselling authors Mary Jo Putney, Jo Beverley, and Lois McMaster Bujold join forces with award-winning authors Catherine Asaro, Jennifer Roberson, and Deb Stover in this all-new anthology of original stories proving that love can conquer all...even the boundaries of time and space. From sixteenth-century Britain to the farthest reaches of outer space, from medieval adventures to tales of inter-galactic love, here is a compilation that explores the wonderfully kinetic forces that lovers share--forces too great to resist...

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