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13 Reviews
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3.0 out of 5 stars
And where IS the Distant Shore?,
By A Cotton Farmer (Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
Pretty good story - and a neat premise for a tale of first contact. A two individual team from a benevolent alien race, protecting earth from the natural vagaries of an indifferent universe, experiences an unexpected calamity and must reveal its existence and ask earthlings for help or perish. By fortuitous coincidence, earth's first Mars mission happens to be in the neighborhood and might be diverted to the rescue - if the few who have received the telepathic cry for help can convince a skeptical world to do so. Perhaps there is a sequel in the future. The story ends fairly abruptly. It would have been fun to read far more about the alien, its origin, its culture, its technology, the scope of it's knowledge, etc. In short, more about this "distant shore". Additional narrative describing the specifics as to how earthlings could provide aid to such an advanced species, as well as how the global psyche was affected by this momentous landmark in human history, would have been welcome. Unfortunately a lot the story is written in the scatological style indicative of the salacious thought patterns of teenage boys. I'm aware that much real life verbal intercourse is similarly crass, but in the written word, it to me is usually a bit unsettling, annoying - and unnecessary. I found myself frequently skipping through the text (something I rarely do), some of which seemed like mere filler, with little loss of the story line.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Childish.,
By Lior Issacof (Englewood, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
I found the characters to be both superficial and extremely unreliable. The dialogs are very disappointing, often shallow and unsophisticated. Unfortunately -so is the plot.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Call for a Distant Shore,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
This novel starts a bit slow as the author takes great care to introduce us to all the characters. Becoming friends with all concerned makes the plot in the second half that much better. While the book is complete, I was left hoping that there would be a sequel to follow up on a number of topics. It almost seemed like the author suddenly decided the book had to stop which is at odds with the slow build up at the beginning. I will read more by Stephen Burns and recommend the book as a good read. I can't say exactly why but I lost a night's sleep as I could not put the book down.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well done!!!,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
I have read about a million books. This is one of the most enjoyable I have read thus far. I bought Mr. Burns's first book basically because it had decent reviews and a neat cover. I was surprised to find that it really was a good book. Good enough to buy this other book from him. Well, this book is leaps and bounds better than "flesh and silver". The character development is amazing. The plotline is compelling. He provides just enough detail that you actually feel as if you are living the story along with the characters. But not too much detail as to be excessive (Anne Rice). One part even made me bust out laughing. That hardly ever happens with me. I had to explain to a friend what was going on in the book so that he didn't think I lost my marbles.The author's views of how our future may very well turn out is exciting, and fun. The way in which the book is written is very down-to-earth...and not technical or too far out. I can see this becoming a movie one day. I sure hope so. But a movie wouldn't do it justice (they hardly ever do)....but while I was reading the book I could actually see what movie stars could be filling the roles in the book. The hacker in the book could be the black guy in "the green mile"...and so on... You have to read this one. Trust me.
5.0 out of 5 stars
This novel was made for film,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
Like reviewer John Rauth, Jr., reading this novel made me want to write my first review. I agree with what many of the other reviewers have said, both good and bad, about Call From A Distant Shore. In the end, however, it is nice to read a feel good space opera (including hokey foreign accents, deus ex machina, perfect loves, super talents and all) that is hard to lay aside. This novel does its job; it provides a way to escape from everyday life for awhile and let you live in a simpler world. I think that it would make a great movie.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very funny, feel good novel,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
After reading the first chapter I thought this was going to be a standard, serious adventure novel after a few more chapters I was laughing out loud. The world Burns creates is extremely interesting and funny in a 'Snow Crash' sort of way. All the characters are very bizarre and you just want to know more about them. You put together Jamal, a black, over weight, omnipotent agoraphobic computer whiz; his girlfriend Amber, an Asian tabooed nymphomaniac; Dan, the 'Virtual Weatherman' with a celebrity ex-wife from Hell and a butch lesbian, biker, producer; Martina, a Russian, amazon, one-woman-army, bodyguard guarding her boyfriend the head of the United Nations; Davsheed, a gay Pakistani-American 'Media Artist' working for the UN and his Native-American UN security guard boyfriend; Jane the pilot/commander of a mission to Mars with a egotistical, back-stabbing second-in-command; Ray Sunshine a charismatic televangelist; throw in some nationalistic, multi-phobic white supremacists and you get one hell of a story. If great characters isn't enough, put in a fun story where many of these characters try to get together to save an alien living on a Martian moon and you can't miss. Finally give the story a feel good message about love makes this even more enjoyable. For a funny, feel-good story with fantastic characters you must read this book.
3.0 out of 5 stars
A fairy - tale for the New Millennium,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
This novel only pretends to be Science-Fiction. This novel is about the drama of human loneliness and incomprehension ,and the Alien crying from Phobos is the symbol of anguish,alienation and fear of loneliness. There is really no point in enumerating the many lapses of logic (to put it mildly) in the plot: we're talking of politics and the human soul,here.That is not to say that this is not a good book : it is fun and pleasurable reading,and you'll like the characters and the athmosphere.It's a "twilight-zoney" fairy tale,like E.T.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Extremely absorbing and entertaining!,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
I found this, Stephen Burns second novel, to be not as intellectually compelling as his most excellent "Flesh And Silver", but a most enjoyable and exciting adventure nonetheless.A typical good guys vs the bad guys story, the good guys here are a group of six humans who are interrupted in their complex lives by a mentally deafening call for help that just can't be ignored. The bad guys are all the rest who don't hear the call and can't believe their stories of an alien presence in dire need. I loved the characters and the characterization. Burns really brought them all to vivid and interesting life and compelled me to avidly follow their progress towards a noble and world changing goal. This is only a mild social statement, not much science in the fiction, but it is a darn good read that started out a bit slow and then came to a screaming finish. A great feeling of aaaahhhhh at the end. Try it, you'll really like it!
3.0 out of 5 stars
Too slow, and too many hokey foreign accents,
By
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
The idea was interesting, but the story moved much too slowly. And the foreign accents were annoying and stereotypical. The Spanish-speaking head of the United Nations, for example, constantly interspersed his conversation with references to tacos and enchiladas (oh, brother). His Russian-speaking security agent talked about, what else, vodka and Russian ballet. The author even used these ridiculous cultural references when talking ABOUT the characters. For example, he said the UN chief was about to burst "like a pinata". In my opionion, this is a cheap way to avoid creating real, 3-dimensional characters.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By A Customer
This review is from: Call From A Distant Shore (Paperback)
An excellent novel. The story was not anything really special but the telling, the writing, was really fine. It was a novel that had me going and that was very difficult to put down. It was one of the best novels I have read for a while for being exciting.
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Call From A Distant Shore by Stephen Burns (Paperback - July 28 2000)
Used & New from: CDN$ 0.01
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