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Sonia Orin Lyris

Author of And Peace Shall Sleep

9+ Works 149 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Sonia Lyris, Orin Lyris Sonia

Image credit: Author

Series

Works by Sonia Orin Lyris

And Peace Shall Sleep (1996) 90 copies, 2 reviews
The Seer (2016) 45 copies, 2 reviews
Touchstone (2020) 2 copies
Landfall (2020) 2 copies
Maelstrom (2020) 2 copies
Unmoored (2020) 2 copies
The Unturned Stone (2022) 2 copies

Associated Works

New Legends (1995) — Contributor — 186 copies, 2 reviews
Magic: The Gathering: Tapestries: An Anthology (1995) — Contributor — 107 copies, 1 review
Magic: The Gathering Distant Planes (1996) — Contributor — 77 copies, 2 reviews
Dispatches from Anarres: Tales in Tribute to Ursula K. Le Guin (2021) — Contributor — 44 copies, 1 review
Isaac Asimov's Cyberdreams (1994) — Contributor — 41 copies
Dadaoism: An Anthology (2012) — Contributor — 23 copies, 1 review
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 20, No. 12 [December 1996] (1996) — Contributor — 15 copies
The Tomorrow Project Anthology: Conversations About the Future (2011) — Contributor — 8 copies, 1 review
Free Short Stories 2016 (2016) — Contributor, some editions — 6 copies
Imps & Minions (Odds & Ends #2) — Contributor — 1 copy
Space Opera Digest 2022: Have Ship Will Travel (2) (2022) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Lyris, Sonia Orin
Gender
female
Education
Clarion West (1992)
Occupations
science fiction author
software developer
consultant
Organizations
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Washington, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Washington, USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
This book started off strong, with engines of pure chaos taking center stage immediately. However, the romance was forced and ill matched, poorly serving the plot. Things go off the rails when the main character (not really a hero, is he?) is literally ripped out of a scene and transported across the world to make more chaos happen elsewhere. Though the individual chapters were mostly fun from there on out, they barely strung together into a story if you squinted. Dwarven love magic destroys show more all pretense of a plot, essentially. show less
½
Oof. I started this just over a year ago, when it was being praised to the skies in multiple places. I got through about half of it, in increasingly limited fits and starts; I finally decided I was done, skimmed through the second half, and while I'm sure I missed things I'm fine with having missed them. It's so unrelentingly grim - the seer spends more than half the book running away from various and sundry enemies, with people dying all around her as she dodges and they don't. And the show more other major character gets increasingly mired in politics and flat-out lies and manipulation - his story in the book _starts_ with him killing his brother to keep him from gaining an advantage. Ugh. It does end...kind of, sort of, happily, or at least not entirely unhappily. But I wasn't willing to drag myself through another 300 (of 600+) pages to get there. show less
½
Interesting book about 1/3 too long. A number of its subplots could be ut without harming the main story. The premise of a seer is well worked out, including how the power sometimes flickers off. But too much time is spent away from the seer on relatively uninteresting matters.
Fantasy based on the card game. The story follows Reod Dai and his attempts to make the world a better place for his people. He falls in love with a dwarf and seems to ruin everyone's life around him. It's not a bad book book.

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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
13
Members
149
Popularity
#139,412
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
4
ISBNs
14
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs