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Drowning World by Alan Dean Foster
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206251,955 (3.45)3
Member:EmScape
Title:Drowning world
Authors:Alan Dean Foster
Info:New York : Ballantine Books, 2003.
Collections:All the Ebooks, ebooks
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Drowning World by Alan Dean Foster (2003)

2008 (1) Alan Dean Foster (1) aliens (1) amazon import 1 (1) Box 18 (1) Commonwealth (8) ebook (4) eng (2) fantasy (2) fiction (8) G (1) HC (2) Humanx (5) Humanx Commonwealth (4) ian (1) Kindle (3) loft (1) missing (1) monsters (1) novel (1) paperback (2) pb (2) read (3) science fiction (35) series (2) sf (9) sff (2) sold (1) wanted (1) wishlist (2)

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Humanx Commonwealth/7
  svfreeman | Jul 19, 2010 |
Foster has a talent for writing interesting ecosystems. It's one of the major strengths of his science fiction, at least in my view. Drowning World has some of the qualities that make his planets fascinating to explore with the characters but overall this one fell rather flat. The premise was interesting but it never really developed into anything compelling. And the plot was hampered by unappealing characters and situations that were difficult to care about. ( )
  Aerulan | Mar 5, 2009 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0345450361, Mass Market Paperback)

Alan Dean Foster doesn’t just build worlds, he creates entire universes. Book by book, his star-spanning saga of the Humanx Commonwealth has evolved into one of science fiction’s most notable achievements. Filled with rigorously imagined aliens and sophisticated cultures, spiced with humor and passion, and driven by relentless adventure and intrigue, Foster’s remarkable Commonwealth series just keeps getting better.

They call it the Drowning World. It is Fluva, a planet on the fringes of the Commonwealth where it rains torrentially, ceaselessly, and maddeningly for all but one month of the Fluvan year. Chief Administrator Lauren Matthias is fairly new to the position. Her primary goal: keeping Fluva’s indigenous species, the warlike Sakuntala and immigrant species, the timid but hard-working Deyzara, from annihilating one another.

The wettest place on Fluva is Viisiiviisii, an immense, mostly unexplored jungle. Thanks to the endless rains and humid conditions, exotic animals and plants have thrived there, many of them deadly predators. Yet the same evolutionary process responsible for creating toxic creatures has made the jungle a treasure trove of undiscovered botanicals potentially useful in engineering everything from pharmaceuticals to perfumes. A man can get rich there. Or die trying.

Bio-prospector Shadrach Hasselemoga has come to the jungle to get rich— if he survives the terrain once his sabotaged ship goes down. When a Sakuntala and a Deyzara are dispatched by Matthias to rescue the unfortunate soul, their ship crashes, too. Now, in order to survive, the three unlikely allies must do something that no one has ever done before: walk out of the Viisiiviisii.

Meanwhile, in what passes for civilization, long-simmering tensions between Sakuntala and Deyzara erupt into violence, threatening Matthias’s official position of neutrality—and her life. Behind the violence, Matthias detects a mysterious presence, one related to Shadrach’s disappearance. But how are the two related? The answer, when it comes, will send shock waves through the entire Commonwealth . . . and beyond.


From the Hardcover edition.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Apr 2011 06:55:58 -0400)

(see all 2 descriptions)

They call it the Drowning World. It is Fluva, a planet on the fringes of the Commonwealth where it rains torrentially, ceaselessly, and maddeningly for all but one month of the Fluvan year. Chief Administrator Lauren Matthias is fairly new to the position. Her primary goal: keeping Fluva's indigenous species, the warlike Sakuntala, and its immigrant species, the timid but hardworking Deyzara, from annihilating one another. The wettest place on Fluva is Viisiiviisii, an immense, mostly unexplored jungle. Thanks to the endless rains and humid conditions, exotic animals and plants have thrived there, many of them deadly predators. Yet the same evolutionary process responsible for creating toxic creatures has made the jungle a treasure trove of undiscovered botanicals potentially useful in engineering everything from pharmaceuticals to perfumes. A man can get rich there. Or die trying.… (more)

(summary from another edition)

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