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Ian Harac

Author of MARS (Savage Worlds Edition)

10+ Works 57 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Lizard, Ian "Lizard" Harac

Series

Works by Ian Harac

Associated Works

Relics & Rituals (2001) — Author, some editions — 151 copies
Creature Collection II: Dark Menagerie (2001) — Author, some editions — 127 copies
Legends & Lairs: Mythic Races (2001) — Author, some editions — 68 copies
Legends & Lairs: Spells & Spellcraft (2003) — Author, some editions — 56 copies
Relics & Rituals II: Lost Lore (2002) — Author, some editions — 55 copies
Legends & Lairs: Seafarer's Handbook (2003) — Author, some editions — 46 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This is part science fiction, part fairytale, and part parody. I loved it. The setting is a contemporary world in which portals to alternate realities exist. The protagonist is an FBI agent in charge of copyright enforcement—that is, making sure other-world copies of things like the fourth season of Star Trek TOS aren’t being brought over. One day while on a seemingly routine assignment, he and his partner discover a munchkin, which his partner, quite unnecessarily, shoots dead. Thus show more begins a well-told tale of mystery and corruption.

The world-building, or should I say worlds-building (there are a few visited in the story) is quite good. I enjoyed the allusions to various works of speculative fiction, from Oz to Star Trek. The characters are likeable. The plot makes sense and unfolds logically. I also found no major editing issues other than some kind of transcription error. It’s the only negative comment I have on this book, but it turned some of the punctuation (apostrophes, single quotes, and emdashes) into little boxed question marks, at least in the Kindle edition I read. I found this a bit distracting at first, but I was enjoying the story and stuck with it. I’m so glad I did. It’s charming. It’s fun. It’s different. It’s engaging. It’s simply a good read. I highly recommend it.
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This is a very disappointing book; the setting from the card game shows great promise for a RPG setting, but the book only has about 50 pages devoted to a superficial overview of the setting. The rest of the book is a standard D20-rulebook, reprinting what you already have if you've ever seen a D20 corebook before.
Jul 8, 2010Norwegian

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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
6
Members
57
Popularity
#287,972
Rating
3.2
Reviews
2
ISBNs
7

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