site hit counter

⇒ Download The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books



Download As PDF : The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

Download PDF  The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

This is a spellbinding tale woven of equal parts epic and myth - with a liberal dash of hard science fiction.

When a one-way time tunnel to Earth's distant past, specifically six million B.C., was discovered by folks on the Galactic Milieu, every misfit for light-years around hurried to pass through it. Each sought his own brand of happiness. But none could have guessed what awaited them. Not even in a million years.

In the early 22nd century, many humans are being born with psychic powers and are linked in a single galactic mind. Those without these psychic powers - the misfits, undesirables, criminals, and radicals - have a choice mental reprogramming or exile. Exile, voluntary or otherwise, takes them back six million years, to a time between the extinction of dinosaurs and the rise of Homo sapiens, and to a time of exotic surprises and unknown dangers.

Julian May lives in Washington state and has been writing science fiction and fantasy for more than 30 years.


The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

There are numerous aspects of The Many-Colored Land that I adore! I first read this series when I was a tweenager and found them delightful, inspiring, and, indeed, challenging and educational. Having reread the series a few times over the decades, I continue to be floored by how Julian May created a series that towers above her contemporaries and The Saga of the Pliocene Exile is a series I would recommend to anyone who has enjoyed the sagas of such modern masters as George R.R. Martin, Scott Lynch, and Matthew Woodring Stover.

The characters are complex and fully realized—as is the geo-political atmosphere in the books and May adroitly takes man's mythologies and blends them into a tapestry of alien psi-culture. Julian May also has the gift of making you empathize with all of her characters—even the bad guys.

As I mentioned above, I found The Many-Colored Land challenging and educational. So many of the books you'll come across will simply be "same ole, same ole". Meaning—cool story, but nothing that really challenges your mind and educates you. Julian May does not fear big words or concepts, and (again, as a tweenager) I had to keep a REALLY good dictionary on hand and I was constantly having to refer to encyclopedias to learn about aspects of geology, theology, etc. But the story was so engaging and the characters and world were so compelling that I happily endured and thereby expanded my world. The only other books I've ever read that challenged me similarly were Dune by Frank Herbert, The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, and Hyperion by Dan Simmons.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 16 hours
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Blackstone Audio, Inc.
  • Audible.com Release Date October 27, 2010
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B0049EZOEK

Read  The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

Tags : Amazon.com: The Many-Colored Land: Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition): Julian May, Bernadette Dunne, Inc. Blackstone Audio: Books, ,Julian May, Bernadette Dunne, Inc. Blackstone Audio,The Many-Colored Land: Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile,Blackstone Audio, Inc.,B0049EZOEK
People also read other books :

The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books Reviews


The Many-Colored Land by Julian May is a superb book, the first of a classic series.

This product is not that book. It's a terrible quality scan, with gibberish words and with random bits of text copied to the wrong place. It's clearly never been proofread and, to put it nicely, that breaks the immersion.

It's a fraudulent knock-off of the excellent original. Avoid this and buy a physical copy instead.
Assorted oddballs who don’t fit in a regimented far-future galactic civilization time travel through a one-way portal back to the Pliocene era in search of a frontier and homestead to live their lives in freedom. By some trick of time, sending people into the distant past will have no effect on the future reality, so the governments of the galaxy are happy to send excess and energetic people into the past, so to relieve the excess pressure on society.

On arriving in the past, however, the humans find they are not alone. Two variants of an alien species have colonized prehistoric Earth. The tall, regal and elf-like Tanu enslave the humans through their psychic powers and advanced technology. They carry on a war with the Firvalog, ‘little people’ who make their homes under hills and who possess psychic abilities favoring illusion and mischief-making (much like the seelie). Then we have the Firvalog’s mutant cousins, the Howlers, twisted into a variety of deformed shapes and living to bring terror and nightmare to others (much l ike the unseelie).

The humans get drawn into the conflict and tip the balance of power. The story is further complicated by individuals and groups who are out to pursue their own agendas and who seem advantage for themselves.

The above is a very abbreviated summary that does not come close to doing justice to the story. But hey, I had to start somewhere.

Firstly, we’ve got a glorious exploration of the Pliocene era and how the continent of Europe has shifted in the intervening millions of years, and a bestiary of strange and exotic animals that form the evolutionary ancestors of present day fauna.

Second, May posits an origin for some of the oldest myths of Sidhe, seelie and unseelie in the advanced aliens, with psychic powers so advanced they might as well count as magic, all described with a tone that shifts effortlessly from poetic to modern and ironic sensibilities when called for.

Third, the characters themselves are a delight to read. May uses a variant of the classic trope of throwing together various characters from a wide range of backgrounds who might otherwise never have met, and lets their dynamics drive the plot as they learn to cooperate.

A striking start, and I plan on reading the other entries in the series.
This is my favorite sci-fi/fantasy series of all time.
Julian May has a unique ability to build hyperbole that continues to point towards a climax then surprises the reader's expectations by discovering yet another peak beyond that one. She appears to have used a thesaurus heavily to throw in words which the reader will not be familiar with. That delights some people and turns other away. At some times this seems forced but mostly it flows.
She's taken several of the basal desires and fantasies that we have and put a face on them complete with many distinctive characters and an astonishing number of in depth scientific references which make you wonder just who was she that she was able to pull so many fields in to one epic series.
Truly an internally consistent self contained universe you'd want to visit....were it not so dangerous!
Five stars all around.
There are numerous aspects of The Many-Colored Land that I adore! I first read this series when I was a tweenager and found them delightful, inspiring, and, indeed, challenging and educational. Having reread the series a few times over the decades, I continue to be floored by how Julian May created a series that towers above her contemporaries and The Saga of the Pliocene Exile is a series I would recommend to anyone who has enjoyed the sagas of such modern masters as George R.R. Martin, Scott Lynch, and Matthew Woodring Stover.

The characters are complex and fully realized—as is the geo-political atmosphere in the books and May adroitly takes man's mythologies and blends them into a tapestry of alien psi-culture. Julian May also has the gift of making you empathize with all of her characters—even the bad guys.

As I mentioned above, I found The Many-Colored Land challenging and educational. So many of the books you'll come across will simply be "same ole, same ole". Meaning—cool story, but nothing that really challenges your mind and educates you. Julian May does not fear big words or concepts, and (again, as a tweenager) I had to keep a REALLY good dictionary on hand and I was constantly having to refer to encyclopedias to learn about aspects of geology, theology, etc. But the story was so engaging and the characters and world were so compelling that I happily endured and thereby expanded my world. The only other books I've ever read that challenged me similarly were Dune by Frank Herbert, The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, and Hyperion by Dan Simmons.
Ebook PDF  The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books

0 Response to "⇒ Download The ManyColored Land Volume 1 of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (Audible Audio Edition) Julian May Bernadette Dunne Inc Blackstone Audio Books"

Post a Comment