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Hammer of God

#3 Godspeaker

Karen Miller

$22.99

Paperback

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English
Voyager
01 June 2008
From this internationally bestselling Voyager author comes the final book in a fabulous trilogy set in harsh and awe-inspiring lands ...

the powerful conclusion to this compelling series ...

In Ethrea, Rhian sits upon a precarious throne. Defiant dukes who won't accept her rule threaten the stability of her kingdom. Dexterity has been banished from court in disgrace. the blue-haired slave Zandakar, a man she thought was her friend, has been revealed as the son of a woman sworn to destroy her world. And Rhian's husband, King Alasdair, is unsure of her love.the trading nations refuse to believe Mijak is a threat, and promise reprisals if she dares protect her realm. Only Emperor Han of mysterious tzhung-tzhungchai knows that the danger from Mijak is real.

But is he an ally, or an enemy in disguise? As she struggles to learn the truth and keep her embattled crown, the murderous warhost of Mijak advances ...

Praise for Books One and two of Godspeaker'seductive' the Advertiser'fi nds new heights of drama' Aurealis Xpress'devious plot twists and an intriguing love triangle' Specusphere

By:  
Imprint:   Voyager
Country of Publication:   Australia
Volume:   3
Dimensions:   Height: 181mm,  Width: 110mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   483g
ISBN:   9780732284534
ISBN 10:   0732284538
Series:   Godspeaker Trilogy
Pages:   592
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Hammer of God (#3 Godspeaker)

An authorized biography of Oracle's founder and brash billionaire leader. Ellison, the adopted son of a Jewish couple from Chicago, seems to specialize in reinventing himself. By all accounts, he grew up on middle-class South Shore Drive, but he has told reporters that he lived in the South Side ghetto. He was an uninspired student who never received a college degree but would maintain something of an obsession with the University of Chicago and imply he had an advanced degree in physics. Ellison is also an indifferent student of language but has arranged his home with all the trappings of a Japanese lord, and a few boats and helicopters to boot. These grand inconsistencies - delightful to some, horribly irritating to others, including many former employees - go a long way to explaining Ellison's unbelievable success at marketing his Oracle database software, used by thousands of companies. One employee, a devout Mormon named Rick Bennett, even considered his ubiquitous software akin to an instrument of God and believed Ellison pivotal to modernday Mormonism. Wilson, an investigative reporter for the St. Petersburg Times, wisely focuses much of the attention on Ellison's one-sided feud with Bill Gates (who views Ellison as something of a gadfly but doesn't mention his name at all in his book, The Road Ahead) and documents his obsession nicely. He also does a fair job of explaining Ellison's vision for the NC, an inexpensive computer that provides quick access to the Internet and stores all of its software on a network server, rather than on a hard drive. While some in the computer business see the NC as the future computer for schools, many others see it as a $500 empty box and a poor attempt to topple Microsoft. While the title is the funniest line of the book, this is an engaging, humanizing look at a Silicon Valley megalomaniac. (Kirkus Reviews)


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