Description
Book SynopsisThe first book in the Web Shifter's Library series returns to the adventures of Esen, a shapeshifting alien and member of an ancient yet endangered race, who must navigate the perils of a hostile universe.Esen's back! And the dear little blob is in trouble, again.
Things began so well. She and her Human friend Paul Ragem are ready to celebrate the first anniversary of their greatest accomplishment, the
All Species' Library of Linguistics and Culture, by welcoming his family back. He hopes. Having mourned his supposed death years ago, understandably, feelings are bent.
Instead, they’ve unexpected guests, starting with an old acquaintance. Paul's father has gone missing under dire circumstances.
Before he can convince Esen to help him search, a friend shows up to use the Library. A crisis on Dokeci Na is about to explode into violence. To stop it, Evan Gooseberry needs answers. Unfortunately, the artifact he brought in trade holds its
Trade ReviewPraise for the Web Shifters series:
"
Search Image is the guaranteed
most delightful and fun SF read of the year." —Marie Bilodeau, author of the Aurora-nominated
Destiny series
"Julie Czerneda's novels
ignite my sense of wonder, from the amazing worlds she creates, to the fully realized aliens and likeable characters. I eagerly await her next." —Kristen Britain, author of
Green Rider"
Beholder's Eye has certainly recaptured the wonder and excitement I felt when I first discovered the genre. Overall,
Beholder's Eye is refreshingly short of cynicism, emotional manipulation, and gratuitous anything. It's
a fun book to read--smart and fast with a classic SF feel." —Tanya Huff, author of the Blood series
"It's all good fun,
a great adventure following an engaging character across a divertingly varies series of worlds, with just a bit of unfulfilled romantic tension for spice." —
Locus"The plot of
Beholder's Eye will strike the chords with readers familiar with the work of C.J. Cherryh or Hal Clement, but Czerneda stamps this with her own style, proving that a story told from the viewpoint of an alien race is
worth reading when properly handled." —
Starlog