From Publishers Weekly
After being expelled from boarding school, 13-year-old Puck travels alone to the planet Aurora, where she is to join her parents. During the intergalactic journey, she is caught up in a web of murder, intrigue and smuggling surrounding an alien named Hush and an artifact stolen from him. Both Puck and Hush are exceptionally well drawn and appealing, as are many of the secondary characters. The villains, however, are not quite as convincing nor as well motivated. Klause ( The Silver Kiss ) has done an extraordinary job of imagining Hush's culture and his pain at having lost the artifact, but her story suffers from problems of pacing. It takes Klause almost half the novel to establish all the plot points needed to generate real suspense, and after that leisurely set-up, the author moves too quickly, blurring details and trampling on what could have been exquisite moments. Ages 10-14.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Imagine a spaceship hurtling through hyperspace transporting an alien Shoowa named Hush and a seventh-grade girl named Puck. Moore's emphatic reading provides a current of excitement and urgency in this tale of interstellar crime and sabotage. The reading is purposeful, a suitable reflection of Puck's personality. Particularly well rendered is her interpretation of Hush's breathy voice and lilting diction. His use of words in the wrong part of speech is made more appealing by Moore's undulating inflection. The affected voices of the criminals are suitably annoying, and the voice of the foil appropriately menacing. A treat for both middle-grade and young-adult listeners. T.B. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.