Renowned for bringing readers "hours of joy" (Rendezvous) and "irresistible reading" (Romantic Times), Jeanette Baker creates vividly etched portraits steeped in history and layered with romance. Now, she lights up the pages with an extraordinary new love story.... Fourteen years ago, Caitlin Kenneally scandalized the village of Kilcullen and broke her widowed mother's heart by running off to America. But now that she has married into one of the wealthiest horse breeding families in Kentucky, with two beautiful children and a handsome husband, all is forgiven when she comes home to visit. Caitlin's true reason for returning to Ireland may be the biggest scandal yet. She's divorcing her adulterous husband, Sam Claiborne, and taking the only things in the world that matter to little Ben and Annie, and a mare named Kentucky Gold. That mare happens to be carrying the last foal of Narragansett, a Triple Crown champion stallion whose offspring sell for millions. With this horse, Caitlin would have everything she needs to break free of the Claibornes forever. But Sam wants the children too -- and the million-dollar horse. He intends to take what is rightfully his, by force if necessary and with or without the law on his side. Suddenly in danger, Caitlin finds that she has not only more allies than she had ever known in the town she once scorned -- but possibly, a second chance at love.
Dean Wesley Smith is the bestselling author of over ninety novels under many names and well over 100 published short stories. He has over eight million copies of his books in print and has books published in nine different countries. He has written many original novels in science fiction, fantasy, mystery, thriller, and romance as well as books for television, movies, games, and comics. He is also known for writing quality work very quickly and has written a large number of novels as a ghost writer or under house names.
With Kristine Kathryn Rusch, he is the coauthor of The Tenth Planet trilogy and The 10th Kingdom. The following is a list of novels under the Dean Wesley Smith name, plus a number of pen names that are open knowledge. Many ghost and pen name books are not on this list because he is under contractual obligations not to disclose that he wrote them. Many of Dean’s original novels are also under hidden pen names for marketing reasons.
Dean has also written books and comics for all three major comic book companies, Marvel, DC, and Dark Horse, and has done scripts for Hollywood. One movie was actually made.
Over his career he has also been an editor and publisher, first at Pulphouse Publishing, then for VB Tech Journal, then for Pocket Books.
Currently, he is writing thrillers and mystery novels under another name.
The first novel in the New Earth series that I genuinely really enjoyed! The authors have crafted a unique and fascinating problem for the characters to overcome, and the descriptions of the effects of the Kauld suffocation weapon were vivid and visceral. A great entry in the series, but it is quite unfortunate that it took five books to get here. Here's hoping for a strong finish in book six!
A vast improvement on books 3 and 4 in the series! Characterizations were pretty good for the most part, and even the treknology which was the downfall of the previous two books was done well.
I've enjoyed this series of books as a whole, but in this one, I found myself really liking the minor characters, especially Tegan Welch and Captain Staerbaek (and their adorable romance).
The normally reliable Rusch and Smith deliver something of a curate’s egg here. The story is fine, the characters are ok… I just felt that the story either raced or plodded depending on where you were at it. There’s a great battle sequence at the end which is spoiled by some overly-long discussion about the strategy. A major non-Starfleet character in the series meets their end here - but frankly, this team of writers would be the only ones I would trust to do any kind of reasonable job with that sort of moment - and Kirk is presented as the sort of person that is competent enough to do the things he does, which is uncommonly rare in a series of books that deals with him as the main character.
I have some quibbles about how fast the colonists are able to evacuate or deal with their shelter in the evacuation - but they are mainly about how the authors are thinking about technology being a tool rather than a background detail, and again, this comes down to them being seasoned SF writers who have an idea about making reasonable extrapolations about how technology might work in the future. Long story short, this felt like they had thought about the setting sensibly.
The best of the New Earth subseries thus far, and a vast improvement on the last two volumes. Rusch's book succeeds where they failed; that there are no problems with pacing is a great relief and makes for a far less stodgy reading experience. Similarly, this story isn't padded out with repetition and waffle... it's just a short tight novel with a clear focus, with characters taking centre stage instead of technobabble. I do think there's some failure with the science, and not enough focus on how the remaining ecology will respond to the suffocation resulting from the attack on the soil - plant cells need to respire, and they're not going to recover as easily as Thin Air suggests after being deprived of atmosphere for so long, for example - but even so it's a readable, likeable book.
Enjoyed part 5 of this set. A good story and a good plot. The Kauld have proven time and time again that they are not a truly viable threat to the federation at this time. After all these troubles you would think more of these colonists would want to throw in the towel and head back to federation space.
Looking forward to the final book in the set. Hoping it wraps up strong. I feel like there’s a lot left unanswered at this point.
I found this book to be one of the more enjoyable ones in the series. The idea of death by suffocation is certainly one of the more novel alien-takeover strategies I've seen. There was also a reasonable amount of believable suspense going on until the end, where suddenly everything just solved itself without much explanation. ("Spock rigged up something to save the day"? Typical.)
I enjoyed seeing the characters develop in this book, especially Governor Pardonnet. It would seem that he matured greatly over the past four books, turning from a naive, idealistic man into a more responsible one who puts the safety and well-being of his colonists first.
Very strong, exciting book. Not only is there the danger that the crew of the Enterprise has to face and defend against, this time there is also plenty of attention to the other side of the medal. Heroïsm, rescue, survival, etc. fo the one can mean a death sentence for the others. A generally beneficiary decision also can make its victims. And when you finally get to grips with the whole situation the real blow falls from a forgotten side. It is not a "funny" book but it packs action but also drama.
After the first book, these really changed tone. Since the first was about "getting there" there was a more epic feel, with problems A, B, and C to deal with in turn. After that each one had one problem and solution, really. I'm not arguing that one format is better than the other, but just know that there's a change, and for that epic feel to return you really have to think of books 2-5 as a unit.