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Star Born, by Andre Norton
Year first published: 1957
Review by Ed McKeown
Star Born is the exciting sequel to The Star Are Ours. After a nuclear was, a small band of Free Scientists breaks free of the Dark Age being imposed on the shattered Earth by Pax. In a sleeper starship some fity humans escape across space to a world they name Astra to disappear from the pages of human history. They find freedom, but not paradise, on a world that also has fallen from war. The remnants of two native species, the peaceful mer-folk, and the survivors of “Those Others” a xenophobic race with high technology sporadically battle on Astra. The human colonists seek only to live in peace but of necessity align with the mer-folk.
The Warning, by Mickey Dobson
Published by Create Space, Copyright 2010
Reviewed by Michael D. Griffiths
Rating: (3/5)
The Warning by is a very unique book. It is a very intellectual and thought provoking story. Where most books seen to entertain, The Warning has a higher purpose. Through science fiction it is the author that is giving the reader a warning. This warning is environmental in nature and the meaning is simple. Respect our planet or soon we will not have one.
Forbidden Planet
Directed by Fred M. Wilcox
Produced by Nicholas Nayfack
Starring, Walter Pidgeon, Leslie Nielsen, Anne Francis
Release date(s) April 1, 1956
Running time 98 minutes
Reviewed by Ed McKeown
Forbidden Planet, directed by Fred M. Wilcox, stars Leslie Nielsen, Walter Pidgeon, and Anne Francis. The characters and its setting have been compared to those in Shakespeare's The Tempest,and its plot contains certain similarities though I think that the analogy gets a bit over played.
Recent Forum PostsFirst up, we have an "indiana jones" like bard. That was in the art brief. I'll let y'all decide if I succeeded.
http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y35/Storn/WilsonF72.jpg
Next up, we have...
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OUT OF THE GARDEN AND OTHER TALES OF THE BARBARIAN KABAR OF EL HAZZAR
394-pages of Barbarian Action!
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http://www.badmoonbooks.com/product.php?productid=2981&cat=0&page=1
OUT OF THE GARDEN AND OTHER TALES OF THE BARBARIAN KABAR OF EL HAZZAR
394-pages of Barbarian Action!
Through brutal...
Congratulations, Nick. Sounds like your time was well spent.
John M. Whalen 02-22-2012, 10:19 AM
I got a chance to do entire team of Golden Age superheroes for someone's Champion's game.
Storn 02-22-2012, 05:39 PM
I popped the clutch and decided to hire the consultant to revamp SFReader. Over the next couple of months, some changes should happen, hopefully for...
Dave 02-22-2012, 09:27 AM
I just wrote a warning missive about Heros Die over at Amazon.com The narrative tense really bugged the heck out of me. I thought I was buying a...
Dave 02-22-2012, 09:37 AM
Hey everbody! I've been absent from the forum for months, so I figured--taking the sticky-post advice crystalwizard posted back in 2010--it might be...
John M. Whalen 02-22-2012, 10:19 AM
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Ed...nice review...You've interested me enough to get hold of a copy.
I've read and liked a...
Great review of a sci-fi classic. :thumb:
I didn't get a feeling of 'Alieness' from Avatar at...


Member Movie Review: War of the Worlds
The War of the Worlds
Directed by Byron Haskin
Starring Gene Barry, Ann Robinson
Review by Ed McKeown
This version of War of the Worlds is not a perfect movie but it is one of the best adaptations of the book, particularly in a visual sense. The movie opens with an ominous voice over a tour of the Solar System using the art work of the great Chesley Bonestell.