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Beinhaltet den Namen: Mary Soon Lee

Werke von Mary Soon Lee

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Silberschwester (1997) — Mitwirkender — 279 Exemplare
Year's Best SF 4 (1999) — Mitwirkender — 264 Exemplare
Sword and Sorceress XVIII (2001) — Mitwirkender — 258 Exemplare
Year's Best SF 5 (2000) — Mitwirkender — 255 Exemplare
Sword and Sorceress XX (2003) — Mitwirkender — 200 Exemplare
Year's Best Fantasy 4 (2004) — Mitwirkender — 113 Exemplare
Do Not Go Quietly: An Anthology of Defiance in Victory (2019) — Mitwirkender — 59 Exemplare
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 33 • February 2013 (2013) — Mitwirkender — 14 Exemplare
Between the Darkness and the Fire (1998) — Mitwirkender — 7 Exemplare
Best of the Rest 3 (2002) — Mitwirkender — 3 Exemplare
Undead: A Poetry Anthology of Ghosts, Ghouls, and More (2018) — Mitwirkender — 3 Exemplare
Daily Science Fiction: June 2021 (2021) — Mitwirkender; Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: December 2020 (2020) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: April 2020 — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: April 2018 (2018) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: October 2018 (2018) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: July 2019 (2019) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Daily Science Fiction: November 2019 (2019) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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Contains one or two haiku about each of the 119 elements, and a sentence or two explaining the reason for each haiku. This is a fun book to read and represents an interesting challenge. Alternate pages are grey with white text that did not have enough contrast for me, especially when reading at night.
 
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Pferdina | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 11, 2023 |
I saw this one in a science museum gift shop, and was instantly charmed by it, and I'm very pleased to report that I still felt that way all the way through reading it. It features one haiku-style poem for every element on the periodic table, relating in some way to that element's properties, history, or uses. These range from deeply serious to mildly amusing, and I'm honestly impressed by how well the author pulls the whole thing off. Nothing ever feels contrived or kitschy or forced, and even towards they end where it's mostly a bunch of different ways to say "here's a highly radioactive element somebody made in a lab for two seconds," it doesn't get tiring.

Each entry also includes a sentence or three explaining the science or history behind the poem. For the ones I understood without the explanation, this was a little distracting and detracted from things a bit, but for the ones where I needed the context (something that happened a lot more often as the atomic numbers rose), I found it both helpful and enjoyable.

Basically, the whole thing was just a pleasant little read perfect for my nerdy little soul.
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bragan | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 3, 2023 |
I’m not especially a reader of poetry, with the exception of Homer’s The Odyssey, which I have in various prose, free verse and rhyming verse translations. The Sign of the Dragon caught my eye because of the epic scope it suggested. I found it an easy read in terms of both comprehending the language and following the storyline.

I liked the presentation as a set of individual poems which went together to make up a full story. Xau is noble, responsible, larger than life and too good to be true, although he has his moments as a vulnerable human. Similarly, the forces acting against him are irredeemably, grossly evil (other than those that are misled or bewitched). I don’t think such characters would have worked at all well presented in prose. In poetry, we can appreciate the vignettes of Xau’s life and his situations more… symbolically? without worrying too much about realism.

So, despite my not being a reader of poetry, I’ll be watching out for more of the author’s works.
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MHThaung | 2 weitere Rezensionen | May 7, 2023 |
This was amazing. It's a fantasy epic told completely in verse. The scope is incredibly ambitious, and the execution is perfect. The story follows King Xau, the fourth son who was never meant to be -- or wanted to be -- king. He is innately good, to the point that if the book was in prose, it would have been unbelievable. But as linked poems, threaded throughout with his selfless goodness, it read like Xau was a mythical figure and his goodness was just as mythical. Even when the book gets dark (and boy does it get dark, violent, and gruesome) Xau shines through.

By rights, this should not have worked. The story spanned Xau's rule and included some major upheavals in the political status quo. There's an evil queen, and a dragon who eats unworthy princes, and a six-eyed creature. And then peppered throughout are the quiet moments, of Xau spending time with his family, or training with his guards, or just being. And those are some of the most memorable poems.
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wisemetis | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 25, 2022 |

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Werke
17
Auch von
23
Mitglieder
72
Beliebtheit
#243,043
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
10
ISBNs
7
Sprachen
1

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