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≫ Download The Last Hour of Gann edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks

The Last Hour of Gann edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks



Download As PDF : The Last Hour of Gann edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks

Download PDF The Last Hour of Gann  edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks


The Last Hour of Gann edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks

Blurb: This book is two parallel stories that cross and become entwined. The first section is Amber Bierce's story: In a dystopian near future, tough chick Amber, trapped in a situation with few options, joins 50,000 humans on the first-ever attempt to settle an alien world. When things go terribly wrong and the ship and its few survivors crash-lands on the wrong alien world, Amber must find a way to survive the harsh environment and the instant Lord of the Flies-style infighting among the survivors, while keeping her much-weaker (emotionally, physically, everything) little sister alive.

In the second section, we meet a man of the alien world, Meoraq, who is a kind of traveling warrior/monk/judge. Through Meoraq, we see the world he lives in, a harsh pre-industrial world where the skies are always cloudy, and - as you soon come to suspect - the culture may be the tattered remnants of one that suffered a great catastrophe. When Meoraq, who is very devout, sees what he believes is a sign from God, telling him to go on a pilgrimage, he soon stumbles on the shambling human survivors, and becomes their unwilling and super-grumpy protector. He and Amber slowly learn to communicate, and Meoraq can't help but become involved in her life, and vice-versa, as they continue on his pilgrimage together. (If you are imagining this as full of cute moments and him magically producing hot baths for her in the wilderness: NO. This is gritty and real, survival by the skin of their teeth.)

Pros: First of all, this book made me totally, 100% believe that Amber fell in love with a dude who looks like a lizard, and vice versa. I mean, I BELIEVED it. And this is not the kind of book where the alien is slightly alien but mostly really hunky, either. Meoraq has a snout and scales. Amber initially looks, to him, like she has multiple deformities. They are not especially physically attractive to each other - even by the end, they can still see the ways in which their species have very different bodies - so the author is selling you on a meeting of souls. And the souls are meeting in an unimaginably harsh setting, and having to learn to communicate across a language barrier, a species barrier, a barrier of religion - everything. So this is no mean feat, that by the end I understand that they have found and forged a great love between them. I'd go so far as to say that this is one of the only books I've read in recent memory where the author is able to authentically show two people falling in love - not tell me, show me. By the end, Amber and Meoraq were completely real people to me.

Second, the characters and world-building are incredible. Spending as much time with Meoraq as you do before he meets Amber lets you understand the shape of his moral universe in a way that drives the emotional and theological climax of the story hundreds of pages later. I don't want to give any of that away, but whether you are an atheist or a believer, I think you will be moved.

Third, I loved reading something that had a really crisp adventure plot and wasn't "just romance". You could basically take out the romance scenes between Amber and Meoraq and still have an incredible sci-fi novel. That says something, to me, about the quality of the writing.

Fourth, the prose is lovely.

Fifth: Amber is a Survivor with an uppercase S. Her character is incredible. She gets beaten down (metaphorically and literally) over and over, but her drive to survive is unstoppable. There were so many moments in the story where I thought "Surely now she'll just want to give up", but Amber is driven to go on, to make it, to live another day. She is also initially a kind of unlikeable character, at least in the sense that you totally understand why other people find her abrasive. It was so interesting and refreshing to read about someone who is the opposite of the "I need saving" kind of heroine. I mean, even when Amber does need saving, she is still the captain of her own fate as much as possible.

Cons: There are so few! I want to say here that when I read about this book initially on review blogs, I felt kinda worried by all the "Trigger warning for rape!" stuff, and "There is a lot of nonconsensual stuff and it's really brutal!" and so on. Also, from reading about this book in reviews, I got the impression that it was a kind of very dark sci-fi erotica/romance. And I think that is... well, I think that's not right. I think this book is basically right on the cusp of serious literary sci-fi (you can quibble about whether or not it truly falls in that category, or if it, uh, is too well-plotted for that) but either way I think that pitching it as dark sci-fi romance is not the whole story. I'd say that this is more of a space opera (I mean that in the best way) with a strong romance plot, and heavy theological overtones.

And I have problems with unresolved non-consensual sex storylines, like many people, and also I am a grumpy feminist, and I can say honestly that this book did not use ethically dubious sex to titillate. Or at least I did not find it to be that way. In fact, I'd say that I did not find the sex especially titillating in general, which is not meant as a criticism. It was more that any sex felt very much like it was integral to the story, and integral to Meoraq's journey from hyper-devout warrior/monk/judge to the person he is at the end of the story.

The bottom line: I try not to give five stars freely. For me, five stars is not "This was really good". Five stars is more like "This book moved me deeply and I think about it frequently after finishing it."

So for me, giving this book five stars kind of holds some weight. I don't know what other praise I can give it, except to close with saying that one of my all-time favorite authors is the great Ursula Le Guin, writer of literary, character-driven sci-fi, and I would rank "The Last Hour of Gann" with some of her works. If you've ever read The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell, this reminded me a good deal of that, dealing with similar themes of theology, God's love or non-existence, faith in the face of truly immense challenges, and cross-cultural exchange.

This book was SO GOOD I feel confused about how it seems to have gotten grouped with "romance", which naturally can tend to make romance readers feel like - but wait, where is the romance? Why is there so much violence and raping? While meanwhile the more hardcore sci-fi fans aren't finding it, because space romance is not their thing. And I feel like that's a shame, because man, this is a good book. A great book. If you have read and enjoyed literary sci-fi like Le Guin, The Sparrow, and James Tiptree, I think you might want to give this a try!

Read The Last Hour of Gann  edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks

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The Last Hour of Gann edition by R Lee Smith Romance eBooks Reviews


This book amazed me!
Read the reviews - Many are far better than my short script below!

One of the reviewers said the same thing that I'm feeling - "I am having trouble organizing my thoughts enough to tell you how great of a read this was. It's so much more than romance. It's Faith, the Human condition, Prejudice, Racism, Fear, Loss, Survival, Psychosis, Perseverance, Love and way more."

I loved and hated the beginning. Although it was far from boring; I was very impatient with the 'introduction' chapters of each of our main characters. I was thinking to myself ' Yeah - This is interesting but let's just get to the story already!' However - that being said - I have to admit that as I read more of the story I realized that the introduction of the characters was extremely crucial! It brought a better understanding of why the characters did what they did and why they acted as they did.

Plot - Excellent! This is a Sci-fi romance. Some may even say it's a dark romance as there are scenes of rape and horrific deaths. These scenes are hard to read but I felt that the author included them to portray the brutal culture in that alien world. The scenes elicited feelings of horror and disgust in the reader - and brought us closer to a better understanding of what the characters were feeling and experiencing. I laughed with them and cried for them!

Characters - Excellent. They are individual and diverse. Highly developed and complex with their own characteristics and quirks [and languages]. They have depth and as a reader you really begin to care about them.

World Building - Awesome! The attention to detail without being repetitive and boring is perfect.

This book was impossible to put down. The story pulled you in deep and stayed with you even after you finished it!

Will I read this again? Absolutely! It was THAT Good!

Will I buy more from this [new to me] author? Yes!
Blurb This book is two parallel stories that cross and become entwined. The first section is Amber Bierce's story In a dystopian near future, tough chick Amber, trapped in a situation with few options, joins 50,000 humans on the first-ever attempt to settle an alien world. When things go terribly wrong and the ship and its few survivors crash-lands on the wrong alien world, Amber must find a way to survive the harsh environment and the instant Lord of the Flies-style infighting among the survivors, while keeping her much-weaker (emotionally, physically, everything) little sister alive.

In the second section, we meet a man of the alien world, Meoraq, who is a kind of traveling warrior/monk/judge. Through Meoraq, we see the world he lives in, a harsh pre-industrial world where the skies are always cloudy, and - as you soon come to suspect - the culture may be the tattered remnants of one that suffered a great catastrophe. When Meoraq, who is very devout, sees what he believes is a sign from God, telling him to go on a pilgrimage, he soon stumbles on the shambling human survivors, and becomes their unwilling and super-grumpy protector. He and Amber slowly learn to communicate, and Meoraq can't help but become involved in her life, and vice-versa, as they continue on his pilgrimage together. (If you are imagining this as full of cute moments and him magically producing hot baths for her in the wilderness NO. This is gritty and real, survival by the skin of their teeth.)

Pros First of all, this book made me totally, 100% believe that Amber fell in love with a dude who looks like a lizard, and vice versa. I mean, I BELIEVED it. And this is not the kind of book where the alien is slightly alien but mostly really hunky, either. Meoraq has a snout and scales. Amber initially looks, to him, like she has multiple deformities. They are not especially physically attractive to each other - even by the end, they can still see the ways in which their species have very different bodies - so the author is selling you on a meeting of souls. And the souls are meeting in an unimaginably harsh setting, and having to learn to communicate across a language barrier, a species barrier, a barrier of religion - everything. So this is no mean feat, that by the end I understand that they have found and forged a great love between them. I'd go so far as to say that this is one of the only books I've read in recent memory where the author is able to authentically show two people falling in love - not tell me, show me. By the end, Amber and Meoraq were completely real people to me.

Second, the characters and world-building are incredible. Spending as much time with Meoraq as you do before he meets Amber lets you understand the shape of his moral universe in a way that drives the emotional and theological climax of the story hundreds of pages later. I don't want to give any of that away, but whether you are an atheist or a believer, I think you will be moved.

Third, I loved reading something that had a really crisp adventure plot and wasn't "just romance". You could basically take out the romance scenes between Amber and Meoraq and still have an incredible sci-fi novel. That says something, to me, about the quality of the writing.

Fourth, the prose is lovely.

Fifth Amber is a Survivor with an uppercase S. Her character is incredible. She gets beaten down (metaphorically and literally) over and over, but her drive to survive is unstoppable. There were so many moments in the story where I thought "Surely now she'll just want to give up", but Amber is driven to go on, to make it, to live another day. She is also initially a kind of unlikeable character, at least in the sense that you totally understand why other people find her abrasive. It was so interesting and refreshing to read about someone who is the opposite of the "I need saving" kind of heroine. I mean, even when Amber does need saving, she is still the captain of her own fate as much as possible.

Cons There are so few! I want to say here that when I read about this book initially on review blogs, I felt kinda worried by all the "Trigger warning for rape!" stuff, and "There is a lot of nonconsensual stuff and it's really brutal!" and so on. Also, from reading about this book in reviews, I got the impression that it was a kind of very dark sci-fi erotica/romance. And I think that is... well, I think that's not right. I think this book is basically right on the cusp of serious literary sci-fi (you can quibble about whether or not it truly falls in that category, or if it, uh, is too well-plotted for that) but either way I think that pitching it as dark sci-fi romance is not the whole story. I'd say that this is more of a space opera (I mean that in the best way) with a strong romance plot, and heavy theological overtones.

And I have problems with unresolved non-consensual sex storylines, like many people, and also I am a grumpy feminist, and I can say honestly that this book did not use ethically dubious sex to titillate. Or at least I did not find it to be that way. In fact, I'd say that I did not find the sex especially titillating in general, which is not meant as a criticism. It was more that any sex felt very much like it was integral to the story, and integral to Meoraq's journey from hyper-devout warrior/monk/judge to the person he is at the end of the story.

The bottom line I try not to give five stars freely. For me, five stars is not "This was really good". Five stars is more like "This book moved me deeply and I think about it frequently after finishing it."

So for me, giving this book five stars kind of holds some weight. I don't know what other praise I can give it, except to close with saying that one of my all-time favorite authors is the great Ursula Le Guin, writer of literary, character-driven sci-fi, and I would rank "The Last Hour of Gann" with some of her works. If you've ever read The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell, this reminded me a good deal of that, dealing with similar themes of theology, God's love or non-existence, faith in the face of truly immense challenges, and cross-cultural exchange.

This book was SO GOOD I feel confused about how it seems to have gotten grouped with "romance", which naturally can tend to make romance readers feel like - but wait, where is the romance? Why is there so much violence and raping? While meanwhile the more hardcore sci-fi fans aren't finding it, because space romance is not their thing. And I feel like that's a shame, because man, this is a good book. A great book. If you have read and enjoyed literary sci-fi like Le Guin, The Sparrow, and James Tiptree, I think you might want to give this a try!
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