PDF gratuit , by John Norman
Lors de la lecture du titre, vous pouvez voir comment l'auteur est très fiable en utilisant les mots pour créer des phrases. Il sera également les moyens comment l'auteur crée la diction d'influencer beaucoup de gens. Mais, ce n'est pas un non-sens, il est quelque chose. Quelque chose qui vous mènera pense être mieux. Quelque chose qui fera de votre sensation afin de mieux. Et quelque chose qui va vous donner de nouvelles choses. C'est-il, le , By John Norman
, by John Norman
PDF gratuit , by John Norman
Venez nous rejoindre pour découvrir votre publication bien-aimée. Si vous vous sentez vraiment difficile, ainsi que baffles pour obtenir le livre actuellement, vous pouvez essayer , By John Norman Merci de visiter ce nouveau livre à venir, s'il vous plaît. Oui, pourquoi nous offrons également de lire cette publication est également influencée par certains aspects. Les variables sont sans doute suggérées pour la lecture de cette publication. Lorsque vous avez réellement vu ce site web, vous pouvez trouver ce lien ainsi que rejoindre cliquez dessus actuellement.
Les avantages à envisager de vérifier guides , By John Norman sont relatifs à améliorer votre vie de haute qualité. La qualité de vie ne se contentera pas de la quantité de connaissances que vous obtiendrez. Aussi , vous lisez les livres agréables ou divertissants, il va certainement vous aider à avoir améliorer la vie de qualité supérieure. Vraiment amusant sentiment vous mènera à faire quelque chose de parfaitement. En outre, la publication , By John Norman va certainement vous donner la leçon à prendre comme un excellent besoin de faire quelque chose. Vous ne pouvait pas être inutile lors de la lecture de cette publication , By John Norman
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Pourquoi devrait être ce livre en ligne , By John Norman Vous ne devrait aller quelque part pour lire les livres. Vous pouvez consulter cette publication , By John Norman chaque fois et aussi tous les où vous voulez vraiment. Il reste aussi dans notre temps d' arrêt ou une sensation ennuyé des travaux en milieu de travail, ceci corrige pour vous. Obtenez ce , By John Norman aujourd'hui et aussi le plus rapide personne qui complète la lecture de ce livre , By John Norman
Détails sur le produit
Format : Format Kindle
Taille du fichier : 731 KB
Nombre de pages de l'édition imprimée : 32 pages
Vendu par : Amazon Media EU S.Ã r.l.
Langue : Français
ASIN: B076Z1D97N
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Moyenne des commentaires client :
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n°225.711 dans la Boutique Kindle (Voir le Top 100 dans la Boutique Kindle)
Ouvrage squelettique qui n'apporte pas grand chose.Rien sur les différents médicaments contre l'hypertension. Il est dit "Allez consulter votre médecins" à maintes reprises.
Clearly "Nomads of Gor" is the most popular of the Gor novels by John Norman, but I would still argue that "Assassin of Gor" is far and away the most ambitious in the series. For that reason, I consider it the best of the Chronicles of Counter-Earth series. Certainly Norman never tried anything of this scope, either in terms of the size or the complexity of the novel, and there is a sense in which this is the last Gor book in which Tarl Cabot is more an Earthman on Gor than a true Gorean. "Assassin of Gor" begins with the title character, Kuurus, being hired to avenge the assassination of Tarl Cabot, a warrior of Ko-ro-ba. The trail leads to Glorious Ar where he finds political intrigue in the House of Cernus, agents of the Priest-Kings, spaceships arriving from Earth with new female captives, a dramatic auction of pleasure slaves, a thrilling tarn race, a climatic battle of gladiators, and a couple of intriguing games of Kaissa (the Gorean version of chess).As with the best of Norman's books, "Assassin of Gor" is full of vivid characters. Elizabeth Caldwell is back as Cabot's chief ally in finding out why the House of Cernus wants him dead and how they are involved in the endeavors of the Others, the galactic foes of the Priest-Kings. There is also the return of a major character from earlier in the series and a brief flashback involving the fate of the last egg of the Priest-Kings. However, the depth of the book comes out in terms of the new characters, including Mip the Tarn Keeper, Sura the house slave, the new slave girls Phyllis and Virginia, the young warriors Relius and Ho-Sarl, Scormus the young Kaissa champion and Qualius the blind player, and Hup the Fool (my favorite). We also meet a major supporting character for future Gor novels, Samos the slaver of Port Kar.The emphasis is still on the action and adventure in "Assassin of Gor" more than the Gorean philosophy that would come to dominate the later volumes in the series. Even by this fifth book in the series the principle that only by totally submitting to a master could a woman find true freedom, pleasure, etc., was pretty clear. I never really wanted a woman chained to my sleeping furs, so I tended to ignore those elements, especially as they became a repetitious mantra. For me the best Gor books were those that took the tradition of the Edgar Rice Burroughs Mars books with John Carter and upped the ante on the action. That is why "Assassin of Gor" is the best of the lot and why Norman never really tried to do anything this monumental ever again. In fact, the rest of the series would always suffer in my mind because of how far short the remaining volumes fell of the plateau of "Nomads" and "Assassin."
A few years ago I decided to revisit the Gorean Saga. I had read a handful of the early Gor books from the sixties and seventies when I was a teenager, starting with book one and reading them in order. After reading many of the reviews online I purchased ten of the Gorean Saga books. I didn’t read them all back to back so it took me a few years to read them all. I mixed them in with other books I wanted to read. I read a wide variety of stuff each year, everything from nonfiction to westerns. About half of what I read is sci-fi and fantasy, averaging 50-60 books a year.These are the Gor books I read. After each book I’ve included how many stars I gave the story. Notice how the page count increases as the series goes on. This is not a good thing as I explain below.Book 1 – Tarnsman of Gor (1966) p166 – 4 starsBook 2 – Outlaw of Gor (1967) p220 – 2 starsBook 3 – Priest-Kings of Gor (1968) p328 – 4 starsBook 4 – Nomads of Gor (1969) p372 – 3 starsBook 5 – Assassin of Gor (1971) p392 – 5 starsBook 6 – Raiders of Gor (1971) p332 – 4 starsI skipped Book 7 because the POV character changes from Tarl Cabot to Elinor Brinton.Book 8 – Hunters of Gor (1974) p372 – 2 starsBook 9 – Marauders of Gor (1975) p313 – 3 starsBook 10 – Tribesman of Gor (1976) p449 – 1 starsBook 33 – Rebels of Gor (2013) p654 – 2 starsI found some of the stories good. But many of the books are bloated bores, lectures on the wonderments of female slavery instead of adventure stories. I read for adventure, not boring slave lectures. The stories I rated the highest are the ones with a high adventure to lecture ratio. Most of the books could be cut in half without losing any of the story. I’ll use Book 33, Rebels of Gor, as an example. It’s a 200-300 page adventure wrapped up in a long, repetitious, boring, slave lecture. The same information and dialogue are repeated over, and over, and over, and over, and . . . (Get the idea?)If I revisit the Gorean Saga I’ll probably only read a few of the books that I found interesting this time around. In the meantime I’ll be spending more time with some of my favorite sci-fi and fantasy writers, Douglas Adams, Isaac Asimov, Paolo Bacigalupi, Ray Bradbury, Orson Scott Card, Jack Campbell, Arthur C. Clarke, Earnest Cline, Suzanne Collins, Abe Evergreen, Diana Gabaldon, Joe Haldeman, Robert A. Heinlein, Hugh Howey, George Martin, Larry Niven, Andre Norton, George Orwell, Patrick Rothfuss, Brandon Sanderson, John Scalzi, J.R.R. Tolkien and Andy Weir.Starship Troopers (1959) (not like the movie) by Robert A. Heinlein is the book that got me started in sci-fi adventures, and has remained one of my top five favorite military science fiction adventure stories for decades. The Forever War (1974) by Joe Haldeman, Armor (1984) by John Steakley, Ender’s Game (1985) by Orson Scott Card and Old Man’s War (2005) by John Scalzi, round out my top five military sci-fi adventure stories.
The 5th book in the Gorean Saga , Assassins of Gor , did well in keeping me interested in turning the pages . It , much as the 1st and 2nd book in this very long saga , kept me up at night while reading , unable to put the book down . In this book Tarl Cabot assumes the identity of an assassin , while attempting to avenge his own death in the city of Ar , former city that he stole the home stone from many years ago . This book shows how the slavers lived , how the larger of the slave houses conducted business , including some of their daily functions in acquiring, training , and selling their slaves . The Priest-Kings are in a battle with the “Others†, and Tarl Cabot learns the who and how that the Others try to influence the world of Gor in attempting to defeat the Priest-Kings .This 5th book in the Gorean Saga was a good read .
This is a Tarl Cabot adventure. It is told from his prospective. He is on a mission for the Priest - Kings of Gor. The discussion of female submission is present but not over done. There are aspects of adventure and plotting that keep your interest. This is not as strong as say Raiders of Gor but pleasant enough. It reminds me a bit of an Ian Fleming novel. In so many of 007s stories, 007 bungles around and gets caught and only because of the kindness of strangers - usually some doe eyed blonde he escapes and lives to tell the tale. In this story Tarl Cabot is lured into a trap and spends much of the book being the unknowing captive of the bad guys. He gets some help from friends and wins the day but interestingly is exiled from Ar.
No one can ever accuse John Norman of having a flowery writing style; in some places he repeats himself several times and his choice of words can be uninspiring. Regardless of this fact, the story is rich in detail; the characters show depth and you really get to know the shadowy caste of the assassins. Despite it being the 5th book in the series, the reader can understand the concept even without having read any of the previous books.
I enjoyed this book, but having read most of the series, when did "kajurialia" become a societal holiday when slaves girls could act uppity towards men and not taste the five-bladed slave whip? I mean, really.Also, at what point was Tarl Cabot "loving" s slave girls, as opposed to mastering them? The poinient moment when he mused about Taken a, "always sought, always loved" was moving, but sheepish, what happened to the fixed male vs.female role agenda?
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