Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN num: 9780441012367
ISBN number: 0441012361
Label: Ace
Manufacturer: Ace
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 272
Printing Date: December 28, 2004
Publishing house: Ace
Sale Popularity Level: 1326442
Studio: Ace
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
On Mars, in the distant future, the princess Haydn's arranged marriage cannot save her beloved Republic. Her arch-enemy, the warrior-woman Frane, seeks to make herself Queen while Haydn--the legitimate heir-- must flee for her life.
A reluctant symbol for those who would restore the monarchy, Haydn is too young and unprepared to assume the throne--but determined to become a great Queen. With a bounty on her head, she will make a perilous journey to the realization that--in order to save her world-- she must sacrifice all that she holds dear.
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Rated by buyers
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This book seemed rushed from beginning to end. I'll admit that I made the mistake of mostly picking the book by its cover. I like cats, and there is a cat on the front. Done deal. Yeah, subsequent time I'll think twice. Other than occasionally substituting the word 'hand' for 'paw' you would never know that these characters were cats or even cat-like things. They act like people with a mostly medieval society. Having the setting on Mars doesn't seem to really come into play very much in the book either, other than giving us a couple of scenes bathed in blue dust storms.
It starts when the main character is ousted from her palace. Honestly it reads like you have just switched the channel to a movie that is halfway over and you are stuck trying to figure out what happened before you got there.
Haydn wanders around Mars trying to survive and gaining allies along the way. Unfortunately, everyone she befriends is killed in stupid, quick and exceedingly violent deaths. It's like she has a freakin' death curse or something... but no, it's just an over zealous author.
The most interesting part was when she stumbles across some ruins from what must have been humans long ago. No clear explanation is made, however, and we as the readers are left with more questions than answers.
Anyway, more and more death and hideous things happen both to Haydn and all the people (er- cats) that she loves, and then... well, the end has a rather abrupt ending, if you catch my meaning. I should just put the spoiler here, but if you really want it then read the back of the sequel of the book and you'll get it.
Overall the book was short, and I think it could have been longer with more space between all of the murders of Haydn's friends. You know, just to fill it out a little.
Rated by buyers
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No need to go in much detail here - I agree almost point by point with the earlier review by J. C. Foster (which is interesting since we have reviewed some of the same books before and usually seem to disagree), especially about the ending. Read it, and decide for yourself if the events of the story justify the way it ends. Or maybe we'll just have to wait for the sequel to find out ("Sebastian of Mars", due to be published in September).
Rated by buyers
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Years ago I read Al Sarrantonio's Moonbane. It was a real thriller and scarred the crap out of me, but it had a real "gotcha" ending that pulled the carpet out from under you rather abruptly.
I should have seen this coming. Haydn of Mars does the same. In Moonbane, the edning somewhat fit the story, but here it feels more like a betrayal.
But except for that, this was a rather good book. Denied greatness, but good. The story was wildly unique and original. The charachers vibrant and memorable. It clicked along at a very fast, engrossing pace.
Which made the end all the more dissapointing and troublesome. Not only that, but Haydn is the unluckiest girl in the universe. Everywhere she goes, she leaves a wake of death as she is hunted down. Everyone who means something to her meets a terrible fate. After awhile the bad things seem to be just piled on to the point of being just too much.
There was also a maddeningly lack of detail sometimes. Toward the end a massive battle between two armies of thousands of soldiers is summed up in less than two pages. Many times Haydn seems cold and removed from what should be heart wrenching, emotional drama. But at times, this brevity helps keep the story fast paced and exciting. I would have just cared for a lot more dialogue and internal struggle from Haydn.
There's some questionable excessive and unnessecery plot points and a blue herring or two thrown in that bugged me. And the only reason I'm being this picky is because this was a great book, marred by one of the worst endings imaginable.
Rated by buyers
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Many thousands of years into the future a terraformed Mars is populated by sentient felines that walk on two legs and contain retractable claws and opposable thumbs amongst other innate skills. Humans are extinct on the planet and thought to be creatures of mythology. Princess Haydn`s father dissolved the monarchy and established a republic in its place, but he was assassinated soon afterward. Haydn married someone she did not love in order to unite the clans and keep the F'ror clan in check.
The plan failed and Frane of the F'ror declared herself queen. Haydn fled while the F'ror occupied the planet. The princess in exile spends the subsequent year on the run hiding from her enemies while making new allies who hone her into a warrior worthy of the crown. She leads an army against the mighty F'ror knowing many will die, but that in the end it will be her against Frane.
The key characters seem humanoid so that for long stretches readers will forget they are intelligent cats. Haydn is a sympathetic figure who Frane hates because the princess married the tomcat she loved. She had him killed because she did not want her rival to have him any longer. Just one more bill for Haydn who pays quite a price to become a worthy monarch. Al Sarrantonio writes an enthralling Martian science fiction tale that leaves fans purring in delight as two more cat tales will follow.
Harriet Klausner
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