Reviews

The Jester At Scar by E.C. Tubb

mtb_za's review

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adventurous medium-paced

3.0

This one is mostly interesting for the unusual planet, although these are not uncommon in the series so far, this one stands out to me. The basic plot is fairly ordinary, but some of the characters are interesting.

The Cyclan interest in Dumarest is clearly not just his hunt for Earth....

bookcrazylady45's review

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3.0

Another quick and enjoyable read.

sfian's review

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4.0

The thinnest volume yet in a series that makes modern novels look huge. This is another straight-up science fiction adventure in the Dumarest universe. Action and intrigue abound (as much as anything can abound in so few pages) on another unique - and perhaps slightly unbelievable - planet. Strangely, there's no love interest for Dumarest this time out.

peterseanesq's review

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5.0

My Amazon review -

http://www.amazon.com/review/R2W3UPRKKRMG7O/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm

sirchutney's review

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4.0

Dumarest of Terra is a 33-volume series of science fiction novels by Edwin Charles Tubb. Each story is a self-contained adventure, but throughout the series, Earl Dumarest, the protagonist, searches for clues to the location of his home world, Earth. Production of a television version of the series is set to begin in 2018.

The stories are set in a far future galactic culture that is fragmented and without any central government. Dumarest was born on Earth, but had stowed away on a spaceship when he was a young boy and was caught. Although a stowaway discovered on a spaceship was typically ejected to space, the captain took pity on the boy and allowed him to work and travel on the ship. When the story opens in The Winds of Gath, Dumarest has traveled so long and so far that he does not know how to return to his home planet and no-one has ever heard of it, other than as a myth or legend.

It becomes clear that someone or something has deliberately concealed Earth's location. The Cyclan, an organization of humans surgically altered to be emotionless (known as Cybers), and on occasion able to link with the brains of previously living Cybers (the better to think logically), seem determined to stop him from finding Earth. Additionally, the Cyclan seeks a scientific discovery that Dumarest possesses, stolen from them and passed to him by a dying thief, which would vastly increase their already considerable power.

Also appearing in many of the books is the humanitarian Church of Universal Brotherhood. Its monks are spread throughout many worlds as are the Cyclan, the two being arch-enemies - which does not make the Church Dumarest's ally, but in some instances they support each other.

In The Jester at Scar, the fifth in the Dumarest series, we arrive on the planet Scar. A harsh, inhospitable world with a vicious and shifting population of prospectors, drawn from every corner of the galaxy by rumours of a miraculous golden spore.

To this violent planet come two more travellers, ready to try their luck among its lethal jungles: the cruel, mocking Lord of Jest - and Dumarest, driven by destiny on his endless search for Lost Earth. Dumarest tries to figure out who is sending the killers after him and why. There is a climactic scene in which Dumarest rounds up the suspects and figures out who's been trying to do him in.

In this book Tubb gives us some of the most noir, hard-boiled action of the series so far. Vivid descriptions of a world that goes from a barren, muddy wasteland to riotous jungle in a short space of time. Tubb also takes his time to form subplots of reform and redemption. All of the familiar cliches and tropes are in place now. Not as much of a full on adventure as other books in the series. But still tremendous pulply fun. If you want "literature," look elsewhere.
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