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Reviews from March 2023 (23)

Let’s Be Friends

Tuyo  (Tuyo, volume 1)

By Rachel Neumeier  

16 Mar, 2023

Special Requests

4 comments

2020’s Tuyo is the first volume of Rachel Neumeier’s seven-book (so far) Tuyo secondary-world fantasy series.

Warleader Garoya of one of the Ugaro clans had thought it would be easy to raid the Lau; it wasn’t. The raiders must retreat. Garoya leaves his younger brother Ryo behind, as a tuyo. A tuyo is a prisoner handed over the enemy as a sacrifice.

Ryo is tied to a stake and left for the Lau.

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Against All Odds

Danger International

By Douglas L. Garrett, George MacDonald & Steve Peterson  

14 Mar, 2023

Roleplaying Games

2 comments

L. Douglas Garrett, George Macdonald, and Steve Peterson’s1 1985 Danger International is a modern-day roleplaying game (modern per 1985), intended to cover adventures set from 1945 to the year

2000 and beyond.” Published by Hero Games, Danger International (or DI” as it was known to aficionados) is a descendent of the rules pioneered in 1981’s Champions.

And what did one find in the box? First, that there was no box. Danger International replaced the box sets of previous Hero Games, games with a 174-page perfect-bound text2 (176 if you count the ads).

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Nor Any Drop to Drink

The Lies of the Ajungo  (Forever Desert, volume 1)

By Moses Ose Utomi  

10 Mar, 2023

Doing the WFC's Homework

0 comments

The Lies of the Ajungo is the first volume in Moses Ose Utomi’s debut novella; it is the first entry in his projected Forever Desert series.

Faced with an unending drought, the people of a desperate city accepted aid from the Ajungo Empire. The Empire provided just enough water to sustain life, or perhaps a smidgen less. There was, of course, a price.

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Blow, Winds

Tornado Alley

By William Tuning  

5 Mar, 2023

Because My Tears Are Delicious To You

6 comments

William Tuning’s 1978 Tornado Alley is a stand-alone near-future SF novel. 

Dr. Graham’s claim that a large (but conventional) explosive delivered in the correct manner can disrupt tornadoes finds a welcome audience in California’s Junior Senator Jill Kernan. Jill is aware of how much tornadoes cost America. Lives lost, buildings destroyed. But she also knows this in a deep, personal way: as a child, she was orphaned by a tornado.

The science of the tornado disruption technique is solid. That leaves merely implementation issues, such as who will pay for this,” who will administer the program,” and how can we scrounge the necessary equipment?” Step one: interminable senate hearings.

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