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⇒ Read Gratis Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller



Download As PDF : Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

Download PDF  Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

Assistant Trader Jethri Gobelyn is an honest, hardworking young Terran who knows a lot about living onboard his family's space going trade ship 'Gobelyn's Market', something about trade, finance, and risk taking and a little bit about Liadens.

Oddly enough, it's the little bit he knows about Liadens that seems likely to make his family's fortune—and his own. In short order, however, Jethri Gobelyn is about to learn a lot more about Liadens . . . like how far they might go to protect their name and reputation. Like the myriad of things one might say—intentionally or not—with a single bow. Like how hard it is to say "I'm sorry!" in Liaden. Like how difficult it is to deal with a beguiling set of Liaden twins who may very well know exactly what he's thinking . . . . Soon it became clear that as little as he knew about Liadens, he knew far less about himself. With his very existence a threat to the balance of trade, Jethri needs to learn fast, or become a pawn in a game that will destroy all he has come to hold dear.

At the publisher's request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).

Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

This is the tenth novel that I've read set in the authors' Liaden Universe, and the first of what I believe to be a duology of books centered on Jethri Gobelyn. I found both young Jethri and the book thoroughly agreeable. As with most of the Liaden Universe books that I've read, the story is easy reading, the characters well-drawn, the tone light. This book had an underlying warmth that made me feel welcome in the company of its characters. In this it reminded me particularly of another Liaden Universe book, "Conflict of Honors." Both books have a group of likable characters who help each other. Both books made me happy as I read them. This book felt slightly less exuberant and joyful than "Conflict of Honors," but that is a high bar to measure it against. Highly recommended.

Product details

  • File Size 1052 KB
  • Print Length 464 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publisher Baen Books; 1 edition (April 22, 2015)
  • Publication Date April 22, 2015
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00WL0CA46

Read  Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

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Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller Reviews


This branching of the Liaden universe, is one of my favorites. Jethri Gobelyn's story, continued in the novel Trade Secret. As always, there are hints of other stories, in this case, ties to the uncle, and old tech. Action, adventure, New worlds, dry humor. Excellent, well crafted, read.
Well, Lee & Miller have done it again. Fans of Lee & Miller don't need me to convince them to buy this book. If you were somewhat disappointed with "I Dare", you certainly won't be disappointed with "Balance of Trade." You will be introduced to a very earnest (also honorable and likable) young man, terran Jethri Gobelyn, as he is apprenticed to liaden Master Trader ven'Deelin.
The story is set when terrans & liadens have recently encountered each others well before the time of the recent Korval novels. Prior exposure to the liaden universe is not necessary for this novel.
The major plotline revolves around Jethri's apprenticeship as he attempts to learn both his trade and liaden culture. Other elements involve his relatives and his dead father's mysterious past.
Not only is this a welcome return to the liaden universe for old fans, but Lee & Miller do a great job in getting us to know Jethri. Quoting the introduction by Lee & Miller, "When Stephe Pagel at Meisha Merlin asked, 'what are you doing next?' Jethri jumped up and said, 'Me!'"
Well, Ms. Lee & Mr. Miller, we've greatly enjoyed Jethri's adventures. He feels like a good friend, and we are very much looking forward to seeing more of him and of Clan Ixin, which was foresighted enough to see in him what you saw (and wrote). You've told an excellent tale and told it well.
Miller & Lee are among the few authors, along with Lois M. Bujold, whom I will purchase in hardcover the day they come out with a new book. I have not been disappointed in the past, and I'm not disappointed now.
If you haven't read others in their Liaden series, you can still read this and enjoy it - it's perfectly good cultural space opera (as contrasted to military space opera) in its own right. It's even more fun, though, if you read the other books as well. This one takes place in a setting slightly earlier, chronologically, than the books featuring Clan Korval, and has no characters in common - Korval is mentioned only once, in passing, as a clan that breeds pilots. So you don't have to know the back-story on all the characters in the previous books in order to know what the characters in this one are doing. There are some customs, however, which will strike you as odd if you haven't already been immersed in this universe.
Someone else described this as a coming of age novel, and in part it is, but not in a way that limits it to juvenile readers. (I recently read, and reviewed, a coming of age novel by another SF author, which was annoyingly juvenile, so I am pretty sensitive to the issue.) Our young trader apprentice is already a fully developed character in his own right, and the situations he faces are not simple, nor are the adults in the story merely bit players, nor buffoons when faced with youth, as is true of too many such novels.
Now, I have to get out of the way one thing I didn't like about this book the cover art. I hate it. It makes the Terrans look awful, the Liadens look like short Episcopalian bishops in their robes, and further, doesn't seem to me to match the descriptions of the characters at all. There's a note about the artist in the back; I have to respectfully but firmly disagree with his conception of the characters. And with the really awkward poses he's got everyone in! OK, end of that little snit. Back to the story.
We start with Jethri Gobelyn, of the trading ship Gobelyn's Market. If you want to dash off and read Christina Rossetti's poem "Goblin Market" you can, but the connections are quite brief and tenuous; the poem won't give you any big clues to the story. There clearly are some clever details drawn from the poem, such as twin girls with names beginning with the same letter, but those details are in no way critical. So feel free NOT to go look up the poem if you hate poetry. Not knowing it won't make you miss out on any big poetic allusions in the book.
Jethri's family is slightly hillbilly - his name resembles Jethro not for nothing. They talk with country accents, they hold shivarees (spelled shivary here), and they have some risk of inbreeding... and I thought at first that I would be annoyed by that, because I don't like stereotypes like that - but they turned out not to be stereotypical hillbillies at all; they're great characters. Jethri's extended group of cousins are smarter than they look.
The last part of Jethri's secret becomes revealed only near the end of the book, although there are hints regarding it which may lead you to guess earlier. Let's just say that they make the question of "coming of age" more complicated.
There is also a family of Russians involved in slightly shady dealings, again not quite the stereotypes; Grigory, his sister Raisana (think Raisa Gorbacheva if you didn't recognize Raisana as a Russian name) and their uncle Yuri have some surprises up their sleeves.
Let's see, for those already involved in the series, some differences to note no Yxtrang, not even a mention of them. Some technology from an earlier civilization that we haven't seen in the other books; this technology is described as unstable, so perhaps by the later books the last fractins have become useless. In some ways, I saw glimpses of the authors' other series, about Gem ser Edreth, in the Gobelyns - I could see the shipboard culture of these Terran trading ships sliding into the completely shipborn culture of the gen ships there, with both the culture and the physiology changing from the human norm. Even though these are two completely different series, there's a resemblance. There's also no noticeable romance in this book, no dramatic meetings of couples like Shan and Priscilla or Val Con and Miri. Closest to romance we get is Grig's girlfriend announcing she's pregnant, and we didn't get any details before that.
No military battles in this one; it's strictly trading and education. We don't even spend much time on ship, rather mostly on stations and on mud. When Jethri finds himself on a Liaden trade ship as an apprentice, he has to learn more Liaden than he knows, and has to learn all the various shades of bows. Those who are old enough to remember Keith Laumer's Retief series may remember the endless list of numbered facial expressions that the Corps Diplomatique had, after a while! Jethri runs across a Scout, with an odd sense of humor, as the Scouts always seem to have, but also meets a regular Liaden with a sense of humor, which is somewhat rarer. While Korval's always had an odd kick in its gallop, most of the other Liaden characters have been a bit humor-impaired; Tam Sin, however, has a full sense of the humor in irony and coincidence. For that matter, we do also meet a Scout with no sense of humor, also a rarity. Even Scouts, apparently, can be narrow-minded bigots more concerned with title, position, and perks than with curiosity.
There's a very nice cat in the book. Pay attention to Flinx, he's important!
I hope that's enough hints as to the characters and plot to get you reading. Trust me, this is not just a coming of age novel, and those of you who love developing detailed pictures of culture and language will have a blast with this book.
I started this series down stream from the beginning, Crystal Soldier - Crystal Dragon and was cough up with the fasinating characters of Er Thom, Daav and Clan Korval family. This story occurres about 100 years after Crystal Dragon Cantra and about 200 years before Local Custom (my start, I strongly recommend reading this series in order). The Authors character development is from classic literature and their stories​ drama build slowly then pick up faster till you can't put the book down. This story is about to a young trader faced with the doom of his carrier until suff happens - typical drama and action of these most marvelous Authors - enjoy.
Together, Balance of Trade and Trade Secret form a two part story that is tremendously satisfying to read.
A young Terran, Jethri, is disliked by his mother, for something having to do with his birth; she is the captain of his ship.
He has quite a set of adventures. During all this, we get to learn about loop ships, shipborn culture, port culture, Liaden culture, and how a trader's business works.
A really interesting coming of age story in this fascinating universe.

The pair of these books make a wonderful gift. The audio books are well done also and are suitable for teens.
This is the tenth novel that I've read set in the authors' Liaden Universe, and the first of what I believe to be a duology of books centered on Jethri Gobelyn. I found both young Jethri and the book thoroughly agreeable. As with most of the Liaden Universe books that I've read, the story is easy reading, the characters well-drawn, the tone light. This book had an underlying warmth that made me feel welcome in the company of its characters. In this it reminded me particularly of another Liaden Universe book, "Conflict of Honors." Both books have a group of likable characters who help each other. Both books made me happy as I read them. This book felt slightly less exuberant and joyful than "Conflict of Honors," but that is a high bar to measure it against. Highly recommended.
Ebook PDF  Balance of Trade Liaden Universe Book 3 eBook Sharon Lee Steve Miller

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