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Moon Magic #1-2

Moonsinger

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BEWARE THE MOON OF THREE RINGS It was the time of the Moon of the Three Rings when the Free Trader ship Lydis landed on the planet Yiktor and junior crew member Krip Vorlund visited a beast show. He was strangely attracted to the owner of the show animals, a delicate and mysterious woman named Maelen. Soon Krip was caught in a vicious struggle by powerful opponents over the fate of Yiktor--and he learned the nature of Maelen's sorcery when he found his mind trapped in the body of a wolflike creature. Krip would again inhabit a human body--though not his own--and on a second planet, Thoth, he and the crew of the Lydis would be drawn into a battle between ancient powers and nameless evil. Only Maelen the Moon Singer could save them with her superhuman powers--if she didn't bring death and destruction instead . . .

1 pages, Audio CD

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

Andre Norton

698 books1,390 followers
Andre Norton, born Alice Mary Norton, was a pioneering American author of science fiction and fantasy, widely regarded as the Grande Dame of those genres. She also wrote historical and contemporary fiction, publishing under the pen names Andre Alice Norton, Andrew North, and Allen Weston. She launched her career in 1934 with The Prince Commands, adopting the name “Andre” to appeal to a male readership. After working for the Cleveland Library System and the Library of Congress, she began publishing science fiction under “Andrew North” and fantasy under her own name. She became a full-time writer in 1958 and was known for her prolific output, including Star Man’s Son, 2250 A.D. and Witch World, the latter spawning a long-running series and shared universe. Norton was a founding member of the Swordsmen and Sorcerers' Guild of America and authored Quag Keep, the first novel based on the Dungeons & Dragons game. She influenced generations of writers, including Lois McMaster Bujold and Mercedes Lackey. Among her many honors were being the first woman named Gandalf Grand Master of Fantasy and SFWA Grand Master. In her later years, she established the High Hallack Library to support research in genre fiction. Her legacy continues with the Andre Norton Award for young adult science fiction and fantasy.

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5 stars
231 (35%)
4 stars
235 (36%)
3 stars
154 (23%)
2 stars
20 (3%)
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6 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews
Profile Image for Lucy.
1,294 reviews15 followers
March 13, 2020
I read these back in the day, probably when they were new. Moon of Three Rings was first published in 1966 and Exiles of the Stars in 1971. I thoroughly enjoyed them then and they hold up pretty well, better than some others of that period, both from Norton and from others, like Heinlein.
This is one of her Free Trader stories with the main character Krip Vorlund, an assistant cargomaster who gets caught up in planetary politics that also touches the rivalry between Free Traders and the big companies or Combines of the inner planets. The Moonsinger of the omnibus title is Maelen of the Thassa, a wandering race on the planet Yiktor who are little known but not entirely trusted by plainsdwellers of that planet. Krip and his port leave partner are drawn to a beast show, where Maelen puts her little people through their paces with no coercion. Due to political maneuvering, Krip ends up transferred into the body of a barsk, a wild untamed animal of the planet, with the promise of being later reunited with his body. Problems ensue.
In Exiles of the Stars, Krip and Maelen take ship with Krip's ship Lydis and continue their voyaging to deliver cargo. They and the Lydis get caught up in a different planet's politics and religion.
As is often true of Norton's books, the main characters are part of something but still end up outsiders.
One thing I dislike of this edition is the cover art. Most of it is fine, showing Maelen concentrating with her wand of power. But her outfit is much too nearly-naked. I seriously doubt that she would sit cross-legged wearing that minimum bikini bottom. It looks most uncomfortable for that posture. We have grown up a bit since science fiction was marketed to adolescent boys.
24 reviews
February 10, 2016
Classic Norton adventure out among the stars that captivated me as a child and still do on return visits. Most of these are engaging adventures but what really catches the imagination are her settings, even more the parts that are just hinted at. The words disappear and you move through the stories feeling the rich landscape of interwoven cultures human and alien both in their present, recent past and the ancient hints of the forerunner civilizations. I especially like the Zero Stone and its sequel for this but Moonsinger and the others add to that.
Profile Image for Gordon.
354 reviews14 followers
November 1, 2024
Rereading a book that had a profound impact on oneself as a child is always a risk of disappointment. In the end my fondness for and gratitude to Andre Norton remain, but my feelings about the particular series are a bit mixed.

The books have been out of print and difficult to get and it was only when I saw that Baen had reissued them that I decided to try. Moonsinger collects the first two books of a very loosely coupled series.

Moon of Three Rings (#1) follows a young man called Krip Vorlund from a spacefaring, trading culture who ends up in various scrapes on a medieval planet on the brink of civil war. He helps a young woman called Maelen from a Gypsy like culture (also a wanderer and also an outsider to mainstream planetary culture) and in turn she uses her magic powers to help him evade capture and death. This involves him spending a lot of the book in a kind of alien wolf/fox like creature's body.

The book opens up a number of interesting philosophical questions. How much does your body affect your mind and how you think? How does being in a travelling culture affect your priorities? In what circumstances does the pressing need to save a friend override the oaths and rules that protect your people? Maelen is a woman of strong faith in fair judgement and life after death and assumes common spiritual and moral responsibility applies to all people whether they acknowledge it or not - is she right or naive?

These questions are all very well (and I can see a possible influence on LM Bujold) but any sketchy answers are rather buried among a lot of chasing and fighting and running away. I suspect Norton was a pantser writer. Also both POVs use a solemn old fashioned diction probably intended to accentuate their alien cultures (cf Star Trek's Worf) but which was at times just irritating and pretentiously humourless. 3 stars for book 1.

"Krip, you are the only one of us who has been through body switch. The Thassa do it regularly, do they not?... You have been through it and witnessed it done for that Maelen of yours. Do they use some machine, drug, type of hypnotism—what?" "They sing." I told him the truth. "Sing!"


I read Exiles of the Stars (book 2) so long that I can't even accurately say how old I was. Yet I found it powerfully fascinating and unsettling and certain scenes have remained burned in my memory some 40 years later. It is an eerie and melancholy book. Maelen and Krip are on a Trader ship that is forced into an emergency landing on a supposedly uninhabited planet - but her psi powers convince her that something not human is watching them. Then they find a massive catlike face carved on a cliff... There is more running and chasing and body swapping in underground alien labyrinths, but with better tension and a bittersweet, more adult sensibility in the ending. Not in an R rated way, but considering what it means to be an exile from one's own people because of one's own choices. There is no overt romance (indeed, for quite long periods the characters are not even in bodies of compatible species) but K and M's alternating first person POV does across the two books produce a rather pleasing slow burn relationship nonetheless.

I think I must have been 8 or 9 when I read this, because by 10 I was reading Narnia and Peter Dickinson and at 11 I discovered Tolkein and Heinlein's juveniles and indeed more Norton (eg Sagasso of Space) and this would not have been nearly such a shock. I suspect was staying with my grandparents and had gone to the small town library, where my grandfather had read all the large print Westerns several times and the boundary between child, YA and adult SF was probably only a few feet of shelf space - and where my borrowing would barely have been scrutinised. So while my adult self found this entertaining but no big deal, I can see why as a gateway to a larger world of both speculative fiction and adult emotions it was so striking.

A final thought. 'Exiles' (pub 1971) is really not a long stretch from an episode of Stargate SG-1 for reasons I can't give without spoilers. Did any of the Stargate writers, like me, read this as impressionable youngsters? I'd love to know.
Profile Image for Jan.
Author 4 books4 followers
October 23, 2017
a good read. not a lot of technical explanation, just a good story. If you are used to lots of science in your science fiction, you may not like her writings. sometimes, I just want a good sci fi story. She fits the bill.
33 reviews
August 14, 2018
Delightful.

These stories.we're my first intro.to Andre Norton. They remain as delightful a read as they were in my youth as I discovered her world's of fantasy, adventure, loyalty, and love.
Profile Image for Eleanor.
35 reviews10 followers
April 12, 2019
Amazing

Andre Norton was one of the greatest writers of our time, and Moonsinger stands the test of time that all great novels someday face. Take a spin with this tale that is simultaneously high fantasy, and world spanning science fiction.
Profile Image for Susanna Duffy.
204 reviews2 followers
January 3, 2020
I last read this space opera in the '60s. A pleasant escape from reality
88 reviews1 follower
December 27, 2020
Moonsinger

Told as only Andre Norton could tell it. A planetary romance with the feel of the pulps but with modern sophistication. A good read.
28 reviews
April 20, 2021
Again Andre Norton has produced a masterpiece

Andre Norton at her finest, science fiction and fantasy combined to produce another of the masterpieces she is so well known fot.
2 reviews
July 12, 2022
To other worlds & people.

I love Andre Norton works. They take you throughout the universe, lead you to see through other eyes and are Goid reads. No shut, no garbage.
10 reviews4 followers
July 3, 2008
Imagine a world in which the billions and trillions that would normally be spent on war (like the current one) are used to fund the space program. Of course, a cynic would say that would only give us the opportunity to practice war on a grander scale. (We've played at genocide thus far-- let's try xenocide.) All the would-be NASA visionaries were given word processors at that one crucial moment and the Martian landing turned into the Martian Chronicles, by Ray Bradbury.
Suffice to say, the book is exactly what I expected so far, an imaginative respite from the vampires, werewolves, and witches (oh my!) of today.
(This post is dedicated to Pluto, a one-time planet consigned to the dustbins of astronomy.)
Profile Image for Linda.
2,174 reviews
August 16, 2017
Krip Vorlund is the junior cargomaster on the Free Trader ship Lydis. While planetside on the world of Yiktor, he gets into some trouble with the locals. To save his life, the Moonsinger Maelen transfers his mind-essence into the body of a barsk, a local predatory animal.

Krip later learns that his crewmates have claimed his original body and, thinking him to be dead, have ejected that body into space. Not wanting Krip to be trapped in the body of a beast forever, Maelen performs another ceremony, to transfer his mind from the barsk into a brain-dead Thassa male, Maquad.

But in doing this, Maelen breaks the laws of her people, and now she must accept their judgment ...
24 reviews
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February 10, 2016
Classic Norton SF with Forerunners

As a kid the worlds painted by Norton out amongst the stars really caught my imagination. The stories are fun but the settings of life amongst the stars and the hints of forerunners are even more so. This is best in the Zero Stone and its sequel but the Moon Singer novels add to that.
Profile Image for Sue.
328 reviews3 followers
January 14, 2014
I'm ambivalent about these two books. On the one hand, the reading was easy and the characters and world were interesting. But on the other hand, it didn't really capture my attention. This was my first Andre Norton, and I'm not sure if I'm going to seek out any more of her novels.
Profile Image for Jeff.
761 reviews5 followers
June 27, 2015
Classic Norten, yet a twist of mind powers & religion, using the term loosely , that allow the person to change bodies whilst staying themselves, perilous to sanity, exposure to other lives, bodies and cultures
Profile Image for James Ronholm.
114 reviews
June 27, 2016
Fairly typical Andre Norton. Definitely worth reading if you like this kind of stuff, but a definite "genre" book.
Some science fiction, some psy-powers stuff, body changing, etc.
This was 400 pages of small print, so if your eyesight isn't the best, consider reading the two books separately.
Profile Image for Anne.
49 reviews3 followers
February 19, 2008
thought maybe I'd like it becuase Andre Norton is such a big name, I've liked other of her books, and the library was closing, but in the end not much hook to the story.
Profile Image for Daniel.
1,209 reviews8 followers
October 18, 2009
I don't know why I didn't get in to Andre Norton when I was younger, but these books are great. I think long time Sci-fi fans will enjoy who haven't read and people who enjoy good books in general.
Profile Image for Bill Ramsell.
476 reviews1 follower
May 6, 2016
A pleasant trip down memory lane. One of the first science fiction authors I ever read.
Profile Image for Sandy Shin.
141 reviews3 followers
Read
July 25, 2013
I read this last to understand the background to the two subsequent books, all are very readable
Profile Image for Daniel.
724 reviews50 followers
April 26, 2017
A short take:

The prose in these books undid me. Both narrators are serious about every detail described, and this single register failed to keep my interest. The plot in each story was interesting and dragged down by detailed descriptions of decisions and moves made by the characters. Put simply, Norton's style in this duology was not to my tastes.
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews

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