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How can you not enjoy a quirky story about redneck surfer zombies? This book was truly a super enjoyable read.
 
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BluezReader | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 12, 2023 |
Describing In Maps and Legends isn't particularly easy: it's a fantasy story that revolves around maps and has some steampunk elements in it. Although we're shunted back and forth through time and worlds, the storyline mostly stays together, as we learn of worlds that need to protect themselves. The art reminded me a lot of Jeff Lamire, but I found it challenging to tell some characters apart (I thought Grandpa was a female for a long time due to his braided ponytail), and many of the panels are very dark. A good self-contained story, even when the main characters split up and seem to go down the wrong paths.

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LT Haiku:

Fantasy story
keeps a map at the center;
can hero read it?
 
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legallypuzzled | Sep 19, 2014 |
A silly but decent short story followed by two novel excerpts. The short story was 2-star worthy, the novel excerpts didn't catch my attention.
 
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patl | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 29, 2013 |
I liked the story, but not the ending. I felt like there was a interesting storyline starting and then out of nowhere it veered off track and never came back. I am still shaking my head and wondering why the author felt the need to go off into left field. Up until the last two pages I was invested. I guess I am lost like Kait was or maybe like her Grandfather.
 
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WillowOne | Dec 2, 2011 |
The Wannoshay Cycle is a brand new release by Michael Jasper.

In the not-too-distant future, an alien race called the Wannoshay has crash-landed in the Midwest and Canada. While the aliens try to integrate into our society, they must overcome obstacles such as prejudice, fear, and many Wannoshay have become prone to violent outbursts. After a series of tragic accidents which are blamed on the aliens, the Wannoshay are placed in internment camps.

Meanwhile, seemingly random individuals begin experiencing strange visions and feel compelled to help the aliens, leading them all to the crash site of the Wannoshay mother ship. Why are they here? And can humanity overcome prejudice and fear before ruining relations and destroying their whole alien race?

A soft-scifi novel, The Wannoshay Cycle centers more on characters and relationships than action and plot progression. This was an interesting look at how Americans might react to a completely different race trying to integrate into our society. Acceptance without knowledge of their nature would be close to impossible. And Michael Jasper has created a fascinating culture of aliens in the completely unique Wannoshay. This was a nice change of pace from my usual taste of space action scifi.
 
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scifichick | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 2, 2008 |
The premise of The Wannoshay Cycle might be familiar to some readers: alien refugees from a dying world crash land on Earth. But whereas some authors would use that premise to explore the flash and glitter of aliens and spaceships, Jasper uses it to explore humanity.

His heroes are a single mother with a sick child, a priest fighting to hold on to his faith, a young drug addict and filmmaker ... real people, each one affected in different ways by the arrival of the Wannoshay. The mother fears for her job as the U.S. government attempts to integrate the Wannoshay into the factory where she works. The priest must find his role when he's brought in to speak to the Wannoshay about faith.

One example of Jasper's skill is the way his characters react the first time they meet the Wannoshay. For most, there's a moment of instinctive fear and panic. The Wannoshay are something outside of our experience. Millions of years of evolution have done nothing to prepare us for the truly alien, and that moment of first contact is overwhelming. While it might be less glamorous than the heroic explorer who meets a new race without a glimmer of fear, Jasper's version is far more believable.

The plot is a bit light compared to some SF fare. There are no space battles, no desperate race to save mankind from destruction. Much of the book feels almost leisurely as we learn about the characters and the Wannoshay's struggle against cultists and racism, not to mention the mysterious ailment plaguing their race. It is this ailment that drives the plot, as our characters learn more about the choices the Wannoshay made when they left their world.

Jasper has clearly spent a great deal of time developing the Wannoshay and their culture. The result is an interesting book, and a perceptive examination of how America might react to the arrival of such refugees.½
 
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jchines | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 29, 2008 |
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