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Daniel Horne

Author of Young Merlin

4+ Works 143 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Daniel R. Horne

Works by Daniel Horne

Young Merlin (1990) — Illustrator — 131 copies, 1 review
Accidental Felons (2009) 3 copies, 1 review
Boomers!: The Final Solution (2015) 1 copy, 1 review

Associated Works

The Paradise War (1991) — Cover artist, some editions — 2,004 copies, 27 reviews
Children of the Night (1990) — Cover artist, some editions — 1,586 copies, 22 reviews
Virtual Mode (1991) — Cover artist, some editions — 1,318 copies, 13 reviews
Brothers in Arms (1999) — Cover artist, some editions — 1,069 copies, 5 reviews
Stations of the Tide (1991) — Cover artist, some editions — 930 copies, 29 reviews
The Barbed Coil (1997) — Cover artist, some editions — 868 copies, 8 reviews
Legacies (2002) — Cover artist, some editions — 853 copies, 6 reviews
The Lodge of the Lynx (1992) — Cover artist, some editions — 735 copies, 6 reviews
Darknesses (2003) — Cover artist, some editions — 693 copies, 3 reviews
Scepters (2004) — Cover artist, some editions — 604 copies, 5 reviews
Alector's Choice (2005) — Cover artist, some editions — 480 copies, 3 reviews
Cadmian's Choice (2006) — Cover artist, some editions — 391 copies, 2 reviews
Soarer's Choice (2006) — Cover artist, some editions — 359 copies, 3 reviews
Face in the Abyss (1931) — Cover artist, some editions — 335 copies, 8 reviews
Brother to Shadows (1993) — Cover artist, some editions — 334 copies, 3 reviews
Snare (2003) — Cover artist, some editions — 316 copies, 6 reviews
Draconian Measures (2000) — Cover artist, some editions — 315 copies, 4 reviews
The Crafters (1991) — Cover artist — 178 copies
Dreamseeker's Road (1995) — Cover artist, some editions — 151 copies
The Year's Best Fantasy Stories: 13 (1987) — Cover artist, some editions — 131 copies, 1 review
More Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home (2000) — Cover artist, some editions — 90 copies, 1 review
Murder at the Diogenes Club (1987) — Illustrator, some editions — 65 copies, 1 review
The Black River Emerald (Sherlock Holmes Solo Mysteries) (1987) — Illustrator — 59 copies
Circus Mouse (1986) — Illustrator — 54 copies
Fate of Istus (WG8) (1989) — Cover artist — 51 copies
The Art Of Dragon Magazine (2007) — Illustrator, some editions — 42 copies, 1 review
Phantom of the Northern Marches (1986) — Cover artist, some editions — 24 copies
Dragon Magazine, No. 126 (1987) — Cover artist — 18 copies
Dragon Magazine, No. 109 (1986) — Cover art: Attack of the Taer — 16 copies
The Folio: Part Four of the Roslof Campaign — Cover artist — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Horne, Daniel R.
Birthdate
1960
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Pennsylvania, USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
It all started simply enough with a party in a nice neighborhood in Maricopa County Arizona. There were drugs at the party and the police were called which resulted in a homicide. 48 hours later the case is closed but newspaper reporter Dianna Holmes is suspicious of a cover up. She asks her former college professor Jack McGlamary for help, not realizing that he knows more than he is letting on.

The shooting is just the tip of the iceberg. As Dianna and Jack probe deeper into the story, they show more find evidence of corruption which is connected to the state and county governments. A Chinese billionaire named Sang Wu has funded a project to help Arizona’s economy by housing all the baby-boomer retirees in prison camps. The prisoners are given the task to take care of the elderly and given better living conditions in return. It seems like a good idea to take care of Arizona’s aging population but Sang Wu has a secret agenda to euthanize people to avoid a global economic collapse. Can Jack and Dianna expose the conspiracy before its to late.

Boomers! The Final Solution by Daniel Horne is one complex read. There is a lot going on in this book and its interesting to see how it’s all tied together. My first thought about how to describe this book is that it’s a complex spider web that traps you and keeps you hooked until the end. I liked how taking care of Baby boomers is handled in the book since this is a problem that the world will have to deal with as our population gets older. But this book gets into other subjects as well.

Make no mistake about it Boomers! is a fascinating read. I think you could have separated some of the story lines here and made a trilogy out of it. This book is one part political thriller, one part social commentary and one part human drama. If you’re looking for light reading material, you’re not going to like this book. There were points in the book where I felt like I wasn’t smart enough to be reading it. Mr. Horne gets heavy into economics and politics and at points I found myself getting a little overwhelmed. This book doesn’t talk down to its readers but there is a lot going on here. It starts out giving you a lot of information to digest and then gets into more action as it moves along.

Despite feeling like there was way to much information to take in while reading this book, I still thought it was a good read. I liked the concepts brought up in this book. I enjoyed hearing Jack McGlamary’s thoughts on how society was getting worse, Sang Wu made a good villain and I liked all the scenes that take place in the prison. Daniel Horne presents some interesting ideas in this book and gives you a good story to go along with it. If you enjoy books that make you think hard about the world you live in then give Boomers! a try.
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I keep trying to find something to enjoy in the Arthurian universe. This wasn't bad. No crazy incest etc., for example. The paintings are luminous, even when they're dark... wonderful. And given the *very* simplified version of the boyhood of the wizard here, I might try another take, perhaps Jane Yolen's.

No idea if there's a particular 'history' that authors are supposed to respect. As best as I can tell, this is *very* different from Yolen's 'biography.' I guess if I cared I could go to show more wikipedia or something. show less
Frightening story of the author's experience with the justice system and his inabilty to receive a fair trial. He goes on to detail the horrors of Sheriff Joe's Tent City.

The book makes one re-elvauate their own stereotypes of people who end up in jail and the people who put them there.

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Statistics

Works
4
Also by
32
Members
143
Popularity
#144,061
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
8

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