Liss settles on the peaceful planet Bimran, but the natives classify her as a male because of her birth-contol implant, and they become obsessed about sending her to either Heaven or Hell
M.J. Engh Reihenfolge der Bücher
M. J. Engh ist eine Science-Fiction-Autorin und unabhängige Römerwissenschaftlerin, deren Werk einzigartige Perspektiven auf Gesellschaft und Kultur bietet. Sie wurde von der Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America zur Autorin Emerita ernannt. Ihre Romane erforschen oft Themen wie Macht, Identität und den Einfluss der Geschichte auf die Gegenwart. Engh wird für ihre unverwechselbare Stimme und ihre zum Nachdenken anregenden Erzählungen gefeiert.



- 1994
- 1989
Wheel of the Winds
- 384 Seiten
- 14 Lesestunden
"This unusual, enjoyable second novel by Engh ( Arslan ) is a charming picaresque adventure set on another planet. To this unnamed planet comes the odd-looking man known as the Exile. The Warden, Lethgro, has captured the Exile after his escape from Sollet Castle, and now holds him prisoner on the small sailing ship Mouse. But when an inspector of the Council of Beng is about to board the Mouse , Captain Repnomar, seeing that her friend the Warden does not wish to surrender the Exile to the Council, cuts and runs. And so begins for Lethgro, Repnomar and the Exile (who we have begun to suspect is an Earthman) an around-the-world journey over sea and land, through strange places previously unseen by civilized eye. Engh tells the story in a 19th century prose style: ("For, as he said, they did not know when they would come to water again; and Repnomar thought this so prudent that she filled the little bailer that dangled always at her belt."). This device is appropriate to the level of civilization on this planet, which resembles life here a century ago." -Publisher's Weekly
- 1988
Arslan is a young Asian general who conquers the world in a week without firing a shot and shortly thereafter sets up his headquarters in a small town in Illinois. A masterpiece of political science fiction and a book to challenge such works as Ursula K. LeGuin's The Dispossessed, Arslan is a book that others are now measured against. "It's about fathers and sons, about power, about a genuinely ruthless (but not unfeeling) mind in pursuit of a practical solution to the world's problems." So M. J. Engh describes Arslan. This is a novel of power and depth that is unforgettable.