The Dancers of Arun: Difference between revisions

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''[[Kirkus Reviews]]'' states "Lynn is to be admired for attempting serious things in the fantasy genre, but here nothing quite works: the settings remain faceless despite any amount of description; the love story awkwardly combines homosexual incest and drenching sentimentality; and Lynn's prose style is laconic to the point of numbness. A gifted writer, gone much astray."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/a/elizabeth-a-lynn-2/the-dancers-of-arun/ |title=THE DANCERS OF ARUN by Elizabeth A. Lynn |publisher=Kirkus Reviews |date=July 26, 1979}}</ref>
''[[Kirkus Reviews]]'' states "Lynn is to be admired for attempting serious things in the fantasy genre, but here nothing quite works: the settings remain faceless despite any amount of description; the love story awkwardly combines homosexual incest and drenching sentimentality; and Lynn's prose style is laconic to the point of numbness. A gifted writer, gone much astray."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/a/elizabeth-a-lynn-2/the-dancers-of-arun/ |title=THE DANCERS OF ARUN by Elizabeth A. Lynn |publisher=Kirkus Reviews |date=July 26, 1979}}</ref>

==Reviews==
*Review by Baird Searles (1979) in [[Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine]], September 1979
*Review by Michael Bishop (1980) in [[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]], June 1980


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:23, 4 March 2020

The Dancers of Arun is a novel by Elizabeth A. Lynn published in 1979.

Plot summary

The Dancers of Arun is a novel that is the second part of The Chronicles of Tornor series.[1]

Reception

Greg Costikyan reviewed The Dancers of Arun in Ares Magazine #5 and commented that "The primary thrust of the novels is their Message: that we can live in harmony, that capitalism is not necessary since we can all share in love and wonderfulness, and that all problems can be solved if we have the courage to be human. Nice enough, but hardly earth-shattering."[1]

Kirkus Reviews states "Lynn is to be admired for attempting serious things in the fantasy genre, but here nothing quite works: the settings remain faceless despite any amount of description; the love story awkwardly combines homosexual incest and drenching sentimentality; and Lynn's prose style is laconic to the point of numbness. A gifted writer, gone much astray."[2]

Reviews

References

  1. ^ a b Costikyan, Greg (November 1980). "Books". Ares Magazine (5). Simulations Publications, Inc.: 11.
  2. ^ "THE DANCERS OF ARUN by Elizabeth A. Lynn". Kirkus Reviews. July 26, 1979.