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Pretty Pictures, Poor Projects
A dated little book
Great Ideas

Disappointingly frothy!
I've read ALL of Marion Chesney's booksof them, however many there were. When I couldn't find some of
her books new at bookstores, I would search them out at second
hand stores until I had the entire collection. While admittedly
perhaps a dozen of these 90 novels are a bit frothy and appear
to have been written in a bit of a hurry with not enough
development of the characters. I still enjoyed each and every
one of her books. Later my relatives after reading a book I
loaned them, discovered that they were also Marion Chesney fans
and I loaned out my entire collection of books to relatives for
them to enjoy. Marion Chesney has a quirky sense of humor which
I enjoy, and I also like her characters and the romance scenes
she writes. (I recall reading Georgette Heyer books a few years
ago and thought them a crashing bore.) For those unfamiliar to
Marion Chesney I would recommend one of her 6 book series,
particularly the one about the six sisters which was excellent.
The nice thing about Chesney is she doesn't write one of those
syrupy, sugary regency novels or one of those prim repressed
style regencies. Her books are fun and make me laugh. I like
them a lot.


The Worse Book I Have Ever Read.
Far from the *WORST* book I have ever read

Oh, Please!
A Cute Booknovels. I can think of a couple of her novels put out in the
1990's that were a little slapped together like she had written
them too quickly and hadn't put the usual effort into them.
I liked this one, thought it was cute and liked the characters,
sure the one woman in the book was selfish and wasn't nice, but
she was an interesting character psychologicaly. I thought the
parrot who repeated things and either ruined romances or brought
people together was a rather cute and amusing addition to the book. Worth a read in my opinion.


Horrid
A Charming CourtshipNot only is it a charming love story, which keeps you in suspense until the very end, but it is a social history of life in the small college town of Marion, Alabama during the early years of World War II. The letters are intensely personal, and I can understand why Kay wrote that she didn't want Ted to show them to anyone else. I'm glad that he had them published so that the world could get to know Kay and I'd love to get to see the other side of the correspondence.


Disappointing
Interesting historical background
The fun of a youthful BalzacIf you are going to read only one Balzac in your life, then maybe you wouldn't choose "The Chouans", but then I would wonder why you would ever choose to go through life and read only one Balzac.
I love the 19th century French novel...Balzac, Hugo, Zola, Flaubert. It may be somewhat of an acquired taste, but if you have the taste, "The Chouans" is a deserving member of the club.


S'alright...'Witch Hill' is a quick and somewhat entertaining read about a young woman who has just experienced a horrific series of deaths in her immediate family that quickly wipes everyone she's close to out. But, right before her father's death he starts to tell her about an aunt of his, her namesake Aunt Sara, and she soon learns she's inherited Aunt Sara's ancient house in rural Massachusetts. Sara heads out to check out her inheritance, and decides to spend the summer. Everyone in the town thinks she's Aunt Sara (who died seven years earlier at the ripe old age of 80), and a portrait shows the resemblance IS uncanny. Ol' Aunt Sara was a powerful witch, and the town is ready for young Sara to take up her Aunt's reigns in the local witch temple. Meanwhile, a sweet romance has sprung up between Sara and the young hunky doctor.
But all the intricate plot-work aside, this novel never really gets revved up. The reader is put through the paces, but the story is pretty two-dimensional. The characters have the MOST atrocious dialogue ever. But, it's a fun, goofy, light, and FAST read, so I give it a neutral two-stars.
Pure Pulp
It was...interesting....

too predictable
Lightweight story.
Weak? Yes. Terrible? No. Enjoyable? I thought so.It is not the best Darkover story, and not one I'd advise starting off with.
However, for those familiar with the setting, it's an enjoyable tale, perhaps on par with _Star of Danger_: fun, light reading in a familiar world.


A serious disappointment"Darkover Concordance" is extremely outdated, to begin with. It was published sometime in the 1970's, and many Darkover books have been written since then. It contains reminders of the stormy relationship between Marion Bradley and Walter Breen -- almost every sentence of his harbors a tone of resentment.
And the commentary itself? Any drooling Darkover fanatic could have written a better work. Don't waste your time trying to hunt down this book -- it's obscure for a reason.
A treasure for fansThe book does not contain much information about characters, events, places, etc., described in material published after 1979, which, of course, makes it incomplete as a guide.
However, only 5000 sewn paperbacks and 300 sewn cloth copies were made, and this makes this book a real treasure for any collector. 100 copies of the cloth version are numbered and signed by Breen, MZB herself (she wrote the foreword), and the illustrator, Melisa Michaels.
I am a lucky owner of a paperback copy, bought in Sweden in 1989 for the incredible sum of 30 Swedish kroner which in those days were worth about 3 US dollars...


Can I give it zero stars?Why? The plot is inane. Basically, some evil scum developers come to the invented planet of Darkover with the intention of exploiting its people and antural resources. The aristocracy of the planet jumps into action, and the author seems to forget their previous indifference to the well-being of the peons.
Why else? The characters are better described as caricatures -- always seen by the reader as stereotypes and extremes. The writing itself is confusing, unstructured, and full of grammatical errors. The book lacks originality, and reads like every other science fiction pulp ever written. Even if you love the Darkover series, skip this one.
An essential Darkover novel.