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Paperback The Last Hawk Book

ISBN: 1504079582

ISBN13: 9781504079587

The Last Hawk

(Book #3 in the Saga of the Skolian Empire Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

"Powerful characterization and intriguing scientific concepts . . . an elegant subtlety and a far-reaching sense of destiny that carries [Asaro] to the highest rank of master storyteller." -Romantic Times


Reeling from a battle, pilot Kelric Valdoria crash-lands his Jag starfighter on Coba, the closest safe planet he can find after a Trader squad cripples his ship. Although the military of Kelric's people have given Coba Restricted status, Kelric sees no reason for such draconian measures to isolate the seemingly benign world.


While recovering, the dashing Kelric becomes the target of affection for high-powered women in Coba's matriarchal society, including Deha Dahl, an Estate Manager, and young Ixpar Karn, the chosen successor of the Minister. Distracted by their flirtations, Kelric doesn't at first realize the Restricted status of the planet was their own choice-and that they can't risk letting him go.


However, Kelric's internal biomech system is failing, causing his brain to malfunction. His only hope is to escape. But when his attempt fails, ending in the death of a guard, he must face a trial that could mean his execution, unless he can win the trust of the people who both covet and fear him . . .


"Well-written, entertaining, classic science fiction fun." -The Plain Dealer


"Impossible to put down." -L. E. Modesitt, Jr., New York Times-bestselling author


"A smoothly absorbing space opera that mixes high-tech gimmickry with galactic politics and plenty of romance." -Publishers Weekly

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of Asaro's best

"The Last Hawk" is the 2nd book in the Skolian Empire series, and it works very well as a stand-alone. It's engaging, complex, endlessly entertaining, and one of my favorites. Along with Primary Inversion (The Saga of the Skolian Empire) and The Radiant Seas (Skolian Web), this is one of Catherine Asaro's best. I read this novel several times, and like another reviewer said, it stands up to repeat readings very well. On the surface the plot seems almost formulaic for a romance novel - A beautiful young spaceman crashes on a matriarchal planet and is sold from one queen to another. However, the gender reversal is not only refreshing, but offers keen insights into certain societal assumptions we take for granted. Plus, the bits of math & science that Asaro weaves into the game of dice that rules that world pull it all together.

One-Book Wonder

Smoothly written narrative and intriguing concepts blend with Asaro's spice of romance and gender relations to create a distractingly unique story. It's a castaway tale-- a Gulliver's Travels set on a remote planet where women are the masters, and where Kelric, our hero, must learn to adapt or die. I think anyone who has read it will recommend the story for the game of Quis alone, which has so many facets that I confess I was thinking about it long after I had put the book down.

complex but engaging

One of the things I have found that I really like about Asaro's books is that the world's are complex and yet they have internal logic. This is true of Coba where a Skolian heir crash lands. He lives a full, very full, life for a man in Coba society as a member of six different "harems" or Calanya for 18 years. In the process he starts serious social changes, not because he wants to overthrow the matriarchy (thank goodness, that thread gets tiresome in science fiction and fantasy) but simply because he is so desired. Yes, there is sex here but more than that is the intellectual dynamics are the more intriguing and enticing parts of the book. Finally a book with a positive look at a female dominant society that doesn't claim to be utopia or in need of "a man's hand".

Asaro is spellbinding

The Last Hawk is the third Asaro novel I have read, and while they each stand alone (Primary Inversion & Catch the Lightning being the other two) they also build a fascinating description and time-line of an alternative universe. The Last Hawk focuses on what happens to our hero after he is forced to crash on a planet in which matriarchy is the dominant social form. Asaro reminds me of early Joanna Russ & Ursula LeGuinn in her handling of gender issues, which jolt us with their unfamiliarity and make us look at our unbidden assumptions. There is a lot of action here, but a lot of subtlety also. One of the central themes has to do with a planet-wide game which also serves as communication net -- rather as if chess & go were a primitive form of the internet. Ian Bank's "The Player of Games" comes to mind. If you like adventure, alternative realities, personal stories and social commentary in your science fiction, this is a must read.

This is one terrific book

I've enjoyed all of Asaro's stories, but this one may be my favorite. Her world building of matriarchal Coba is fascinating, as are her characters. I also loved the role reversal, with Kelric playing the Helen of Troy role as most of the female rulers on the planet fall in love with him. There are comic aspects to this, and terrific characterization, but also serious ideas about what it means to be adored but powerless, usually a role assigned to women. I also loved the strategy game of Quis, a truly brilliant fictional invention. I understand that Kelric's story will be carried on in an upcoming Asaro title. I fully intend to snap it up the day it appears.
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