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Book Details

The Legacy of Heorot

78.6% complete
Copyright © 1987 by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle and Steven Barnes
1987
Science Fiction
2016
1 time
See 34
1 - Camelot
2 - On The Beach
3 - Frozen Sleep
4 - Rainy Night
5 - Autopsy I
6 - At the Wire
7 - The Blind
8 - Grendel's Arm
9 - Contact
10 - Nightmare
11 - Eulogy
12 - Dinosaur Killer
13 - Homestead
14 - Reunion
15 - Year Day
16 - On The Cliff
17 - Rescue
18 - Descent Into Hell
19 - Grendel's Mother
20 - Autopsy II
21 - Killing Ground
22 - The Last Grendel
23 - Mending Walls
24 - Remittance Man
25 - Life Cycle
26 - Gone Fishing
27 - Salvage
28 - Marabunta
29 - Holding
30 - Challenge
31 - Grendels In The Mist
32 - The Keep
33 - The Last Stand
34 - Hunting Party
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract Has a year read Has a rating In my library In a series 
1708
 Legacy of Heorot*
#1 of 3
Legacy of Heorot*     See series as if on a bookshelf
A series of science fiction novels written by Larry Niven with Steven Barnes and Jerry Pournelle on the first two novels.

1) The Legacy of Heorot
2) Beowulf's Children
3) Destiny's Road
Jack Cohen is one of the world's experts on fertility and reproduction. He is also a rabid science fiction fan who - inspired by his knowledge of the queerer forms of earthly life -constantly generates new concepts for aliens. He tends to give his aliens away to whatever science fiction writer is standing nearest.

He was at Larry Niven's house when he described an African frog with nasty habits.

It's been a long time, Jack. Thanks for waiting.
"Cadzie!
May contain spoilers
And perhaps, just perhaps, there was no dragon after all.
No comments on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
The jagged shape of Mucking Great Mountain rose like a primordial cairn, a titanic mass of unweathered rock stacked as if by Neolithic ritual, towering, raw-edged, lost in the clouds that shrouded the plateau.

There was almost no vegetation on the mountain, nothing but moss and a little scrub brush that withered out and died within a hundred meters of its base. Pterodons lived up there somewhere, but on this night they slipped invisibly through the mist or huddled in their nests, rough gray wings enfolding the leathery eggs of their young.

The plateau itself was only a few hundred meters wide, fuzzed with brush, and walled at the northern end by thorn-tree brambles. A failed stand of larger trees formed a rough deadfall at the far southern end: the soil had never been rich, and the trees—gnarled, spiky growths full of knotted fiber—had died before their maturity, too weak to resist the first onslaught of natural parasites. Now the ubiquitous thorn brush fed on the tangled debris. A few tough, rubbery plants surrounded the artesian spring at the base of the mountain, but there was insufficient moss or lichen to break down the rock, and most of the plateau was barren.

Barren, and deserted—except for two men and a single frightened calf.

Cadmann Weyland adjusted a bowline knot around the smooth white curve of its neck, then tugged on the line to check the anchoring: it was securely spiked into the rock. The calf licked his hand, tried to run a warm pink tongue wetly over his face. Cadmann pulled away guiltily. The calf dropped its head and lowed in misery.

"Sorry about this, Joshua." He scratched it behind one speckled ear. In its eyes shone the pitiful gratitude of a retarded child given a rubber bonbon. Cadmann felt dirty.

He pulled his jacket tighter and peered up into the mist. It was deeper than even two hours before, masking the starlight, blanketing the twin moons.

Thirty meters distant, on the eastern side of the plateau, was the half-completed blind he and Ernst had constructed. The big German had worked tirelessly for three hours, driving stakes into the rock with sharp powerful hammer blows, cutting and dragging sections of thorn bush, binding them into place and meticulously adjusting the spiny walls into camouflage position.

Thorns gouged needle points through Cadmann's glove as he helped Ernst haul one last gnarled section into place. "Ouch!"

The big German turned, grinned lopsidedly. "Thorns sharp, hey? I bring lots of band-aids."

"Sylvia swears these things are harmless." He grunted, pulling off his glove. The tip of the thorn had broken off under the skin, and would take tweezers to work free. No time now.

The calf brayed miserably. Ernst clucked sympathetically "Poor Joshua scared. We shoot, you shoot good and straight. Kill wolf. We take calf home."

"So it can grow up to be a cheeseburger. Some consolation."

"Cadmann?"

"Oh, nothing. On Earth I'd stake that calf out for a mountain lion without a second thought. Here—God, I don't know. In comparison with whatever's been pruning our flock, that calf's my second cousin. It just doesn't feel quite right."

Cadmann scanned their blind, the wall of thorn that hemmed them in on three sides. The Skeeter was hidden in the rock niche behind them, invisible from above or the sides. The blind wasn't perfect, but it would have to do.

The wire grid rectangle of their heater sputtered with flame as Cadmann squatted in front of it. The night was colder than he had realized: the waves of heat eased the tension in his back and shoulders.

He unsnapped his rifle case and lifted free his most prized possession.

 

Added: 14-Jun-2015
Last Updated: 25-Apr-2022

Publications

 01-Jan-2011
Spectrum Literary Agency, Inc.
Kindle e-Book
In my libraryI read this editionOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Jan-2011
Format:
Kindle e-Book
Cover Price:
$6.99
Pages*:
377
Read:
Once
Reading(s):
1)   30 May 2016 - 4 Jun 2016
Cover Link(s):
Internal ID:
2531
ISBN:
1-470-83554-1
ISBN-13:
978-1-470-83554-5
Country:
United States
Language:
English
From amazon.com:

BOOK ONE IN THE CLASSIC HEOROT SERIES FROM GENRE LEGENDS LARRY NIVEN, JERRY POURNELLE, AND STEVEN BARNES

The two hundred colonists on board the Geographic have spent a century in cold sleep to arrive here: Avalon, a lush, verdant planet lightyears from Earth. They hope to establish a permanent colony, and Avalon seems the perfect place. And so they set about planting and building.

But their very presence has upset the ecology of Avalon. Soon an implacable predator stalks them, picking them off one by one. In order to defeat this alien enemy, they must reevaluate everything they think they know about Avalon, and uncover the planet's dark secrets.

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

About The Legacy of Heorot:
"Page-turning action and suspense, good characterization and convincing setting . . . may be the best thing any of those authors has written.”—The Denver Post

“Outstanding! . . . The best ever, by the best in the field . . . the ultimate combination of imagination and realism.”—Tom Clancy

“Well written, action-packed, and tension filled . . . makes Aliens look like a Disney nature film."—The Washington Post

“Spine-tingling ecological tale of terror.”—Locus

About sequel Beowulf's Children:
"Few writers have a finer pedigree than those here. . . . As one might suspect Beowulf's Children is seamless . . . absorbing, substantial . . . masterful novel."—Los Angeles Times

"Panoramic SF adventure at its best."—Library Journal

About Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle:
"Possibly the greatest science fiction novel I have ever read."—Robert A. Heinlein on The Mote in God's Eye

About Larry Niven:
“Larry Niven’s RINGWORLD remains one of the all-time classic travelogues of science fiction — a new and amazing world and fantastic companions.”—Greg Bear

"Our premier hard SF writer.”—The Baltimore Sun

"The scope of Larry Niven's work is so vast that only a writer of supreme talent could disguise the fact as well as he can."—Tom Clancy

"Niven is a true master."—Frederik Pohl

About Jerry Pournelle:
"Jerry Pournelle is one of science fiction's greatest storytellers."—Poul Anderson

"Jerry Pournelle's trademark is first-rate action against well-realized backgrounds of hard science and hardball politics."—David Drake

"Rousing . . . The Best of the Genre"—The New York Times

"On the cover . . . is the claim 'No. 1 Adventure Novel of the Year.' And well it might be."—Milwaukee Journal on Janissaries

About Steven Barnes:
“Brilliant, surprising, and devastating.”—David Mack

“Sharp, observant and scary.”—Greg Bear

"Profound and exhilarating."—Maurice Broaddus, author of The Knights of Breton Court

“Barnes gives us characters that are vividly real people, conceived with insight and portrayed with compassion and rare skill and then he stokes the suspense up to levels that will make the reader miss sleep and be late for work.”—Tim Powers

“[Barnes] combines imagination, anthropology and beautiful storytelling as he takes readers to the foot of the Great Mountain, today known as Mount Kilimanjaro.”—Durham Triangle Tribune on Great Sky Woman
Cover:
Book Cover
Notes and Comments:
Image File
01-Jan-2011
Spectrum Literary Agency, Inc.
Kindle e-Book

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*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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