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Pegasus in Flight [Hardcover]

Anne McCaffrey
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Oct 31 1990
As director of the Jerhattan Parapsychic Center, telepath Rhyssa Owen coordinated the job assignments for psychically gifted Talents. And though she had her hands full dealing with the unreasonable demand for kinetics to work on the space platform that would be humankind's stepping-stone to the stars, she was always ready to welcome new Talents to the Center.

Feisty and streetwise, twelve-year-old Tirla used her extraordinary knack for languages to eke out a living in the Linear developments, where the poor struggled to make ends meet and children were conscripted or sold into menial work programs. Young Peter, paralyzed in a freak accident, hoped someday to get into space where zero gravity would enable him to function more easily. Both desperately needed help only other Talents could provide.

With the appearance in her life of one extraordinary man with no measurable Talent at all, Rhyssa suddenly found herself questioning everything she thought she knew about her people. And when two Talented children were discovered to have some very unusual -- and unexpected -- abilities, she realized that she would have to reassess the potential of all Talentkind...


From the Paperback edition.

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From Publishers Weekly

McCaffrey continues to develop her future world in which psionic Talents, once feared and despised, are by now necessary to the comfort and conduct of society. Following the events in To Ride, Pegasus and set a generation or so before The Rowan , this era finds mankind not yet having settled planets outside the solar system. Even with officially mandated birth control, the world teems with too many people. Essential to the construction of a space station being built to serve as springboard to the stars are the services of the Talents--particularly the telekinetics, who can move objects by mental power. Telepath Rhyssa Owen, a top official of the Center for Parapsychic Talents, must contend with the station's construction manager, who treats Talents brutally and otherwise discourages them from working for her. Meanwhile two youngsters are found to be unusually Talented: Peter Reidinger overcomes paralysis to develop the first gestalt with electrical generators (this becomes the basis for future space travel), while Tirlap, an illegal child from the vertical slums, facilitates communication among a wide variety of cultures. Meanwhile, kidnappers prey on children for pederastic pursuits and for spare parts. McCaffrey's world of the Talented is as vivid as that of Pern and its dragons. Major ad/promo.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

YA-- This book is set shortly after To Ride Pegasus (Ballantine, 1986) and centuries before The Rowan (Putnam, 1990). Rhyssa Owen, telepathic granddaughter of Daffyd op Owen, is now director of the Center for Parapsychic Talents, a nonprofit organization that works for the betterment of humanity by predicting disasters, controlling crime, locating missing persons or things , and manipulating material , from heavy equipment to the microscopic. The Center becomes involved with a ruthless head of construction who uses and abuses these talents in the dangerous task of building the first space platform. Tirla, 12, and adolescent Peter become involved in the growing crisis. McCaffrey continues her fascinating parapsychic chronicle in this fast-paced, easy read, and readers are sure to care about her multidimensional, believable characters.
-John Lawson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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First Sentence
Tirla took a quick look from the alley into the Main Concourse of Residential Linear G, then pulled back instantly, flattening her thin twelve-year-old body against the plas-slab wall. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5 stars
Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Book 2 in the Pegasus series May 17 2004
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Anne McCaffrey is the greatest. This book continues the story of psychically Talented individuals in the near future. The characters are getting filled out more in this book. You have to read this one second. Don't try to read it before To Ride Pegasus. Actually they could have easily been combined into one book. They are available as a double set and that is how I bought my copies. This series is a wonderful look at "what if" in our own society. A great read!!! Definitly follow up on the story by reading Pegasus in Space.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Better than the first Pegasus Aug 15 2001
Format:Mass Market Paperback
With the end of the second book I was disappointed that it had ended. At fisrt I was not overly thrilled that the main characters from "To Ride Pegasus" were used, but by the middle I was truly enjoying these new characters. I was overly joyed when Doreta returned but as an older woman giving some link between the first two novels. When I picked up the third novel I was pleased that the characters from this book continue on. I still wonder at the limit of Peter's Talent, and besides her natural Talent for languages Tirla has some other Talents that are still hidden. The topic of child theft and their use as a labour force on farms, in mines, and as prostitutes is somthing most of use may not think about but occurs all time in all countries, in one form or another. Yet the story also shows us that children can have the greatest impact on use personally and on society if they are given a chance to succeed. With hints from other reviewers that there is a link between this an the Rowan series I may have to start that one soon.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A worthy successor to To Ride Pegasus July 20 2001
Format:Mass Market Paperback
This one is even better than the first Pagasus book - tighter writing, characters drawn with more assurance, the implications of life in a society where some have Talents more carefully explored.

DON'T read this book first. They must be read in order to get the full impact of McCaffrey's rare ability to create a consistant and delightful premise, then work out all the implications logically.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Didn't realize this was the 2nd book in series
What a wonderful book leading into the Rowan series! After being disappointed with the Tower and the Hive, I was leary of going back to the beginning, but now I am amazed that I... Read more
Published on Oct 1 2000 by orbops
4.0 out of 5 stars The stuff of legends
This, the second book in the Pegasus series, which predates (in timeline) the Rowan and its successors, is a good book an many levels. Read more
Published on Sep 16 2000 by Bm Levitan
5.0 out of 5 stars Good supplement to the Rowan series
I like all McCaffrey's Talent series,and this one is quite good too,though the Rowan series is better.Still,I like reading the Pegasus books. Read more
Published on Aug 13 2000 by "light_catcher"
4.0 out of 5 stars One of my fave McCaffery books :0)
This is one of the few books by Anne McCaffery outside of the Pern series that I've read, and I like it the best. My fave character is Tirla, naturally. Read more
Published on May 31 1999
4.0 out of 5 stars A cinemagraphic style of writing - hard to put down
This was my first encounter with the work of Anne McAffery and initailly I found the plot confusing and hard to follow - particularly as the environment, characters and even the... Read more
Published on April 21 1999 by Ruthcabeza@hotmail.com
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read!! Makes you think of your own Talents.
Pegasus In Flight does not focus on too many details about the theories behind paranormal activities like telepathy, but it paints a wonderful and convincing story about... Read more
Published on Feb 18 1999
5.0 out of 5 stars ....A richly embroidered novel set in a realistic world
I have read Pegasus In Flight twice and find it very interesting. The book's characters each have distinct personality which shows in their words and actions. Read more
Published on Nov 14 1998
5.0 out of 5 stars What to read when you have the chicken pox.
My sister bought me Pegasus in Flight when I was 16 and had the chicken pox. I'm 22 now and just love the book dearly. Read more
Published on Aug 26 1998 by KieRae
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and fantastic...
I borrowed this book from my school library, and it was interesting and fascinating. Enough so that I wanted to search for other books in this series! Read more
Published on April 23 1998
3.0 out of 5 stars Very bright moments and very dull...overall, pretty good
For those who have read To Ride Pegasus and the Talent series, Pegasus in Flight holds quite a few familiar surprises. Read more
Published on Nov 27 1997 by Jeff Lee
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