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Roivan [Paperback]

Glynne MacLean
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

NZ LISTENER, December 20-26 2003.

It's brilliantly imaginative and admirably gripping, but nowhere near as scary as its cover.

Bays and Remuera Times, November 5, 2003.

"... This book is quite riveting. Even adult readers will be caught up (in) this compelling story."

NORTH & SOUTH, November 2003 - Pg 104.

" Wellington writer Glynne MacLean's first novel Roivan entrances from chapter one."

CAPITAL TIMES September 17, 2003

"..a fast moving, entertaining read which all ages will enjoy..."

Synopsis

The "Constellation Prime" is alarmed to discover a very unusual stowaway on his ship. The size of a small child, Roivan is an unknown species, telepathic, telekinetic, and amphibian. She can teleport around galaxies and has unusual and powerful skills. But where is she from and what does she want?

From the Author

Roivan was listed by the Children's Literature Foundation of New Zealand among just eight Young Adult Fiction titles in their List of Notable Books 2004 in addition to being listed as a NZ Listener Best Book of 2003. Roivan won the 2003 Sir Julius Vogel Award for Best New Talent as well as being a finalist in the Sir Julius Vogel Awards Best Novel category.

From the Inside Flap

Her instructions were clear: travel to human space. Once in human space stay there. Do not return. Speak only your name, Do not take the Test. Protect your mind. Do not speak of your world, your life or your species until you meet someone who tells you first.

Qirl had said that she must stay no more than fifteen days on any ship. If she stayed longer she would be caught. But the crew know Roivan is aboard and she has nowhere else to go.

About the Author

Glynne MacLean is a novelist and poet who was born in Christchurch and attended twelve schools throughout New Zealand. She graduated from Waikato University in 1984 with a Bachelor of Arts.

MacLean began her career in the travel industry, but has since 1996 worked as a writer both online and on paper.
MacLean’s first novel Roivan: Book One of the A’nzarian Chronicle (Penguin, 2003) was a finalist in the Sir Julius Vogel Awards Best Novel category and won the 2003 Sir Julius Vogel Award for Best New Talent. The novel was also listed as a NZ Listener Best Book of 2003 and by the Children’s Literature Foundation as a Notable Book 2004.

MacLean’s first novel for adults is Love in Shades of Grey (Penguin, 2004). Sue Edmonds, writing in the Waikato Times, describes the novel ‘as seen through the eyes of a woman whose determination to complete her task, whatever it takes, is brilliantly but calmly portrayed.’

MacLean’s short fiction has been published in DIS Information, her poetry in the Swiss journal Niederngasse, the Journal of Winning Poetry. She has also published in the ezines Fantasy Folklore & Fairytales and Poems Niederngasse.
Glynne MacLean lives in Wellington.

Excerpted from Roivan by Glynne MacLean. Copyright © 0. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

Why is there no one out there?

What is wrong?

There have to be others; there have always been others.

Clearing her mind as she had been taught, Roivan started at the first engine room configuration, then visualised each in sequence, searching for a match somewhere out there. Anywhere. Anywhere at all.

But there was no one, no hint of intelligence beyond the confines of the ship. She couldn't hear anything. They were alone. For the first time since she had left, Roivan had nowhere else to go.

Qirl had said that she must stay no more than fifteen days on any one ship. If she stayed more than fifteen days she would get caught. It had now been a lot longer than that. She mustn't get caught. She mustn't, and yet the crew knew she was here. The-Ginger-One had set laser traps and was monitoring the sustomat logs. They knew she was aboard, not exactly where, but in the engine room somewhere. She had to leave.

She had to leave.

Again Roivan checked for other space traffic and again, heard nothing. At a loss as to what else to do, she contacted the life form that lived beneath the engines in the central core of the ship. It was many, many ships, an age ago, that Roivan had first encountered these beings. Ever since that time, every ship she travelled on, had such a being aboard. She did not know what they were, only that they assisted in some way with the transition between sub and exponential light speed. She could feel their mental energy. It rippled about the engine casing like the cool mist that used to alight upon the waters with the fall of the sun back home.

She had never tried to talk to one before, but in the past they had always seem to know she was aboard and had never raised an alarm or displayed any form of concern at her presence. Roivan had become accustomed to their energies and each time she changed ship she touched that energy first, just to reassure herself. Now she reached out with her mind, forming her introduction and question.

Hullo. I am Roivan. May I ask you a question please?

Hullo Roivan. I am Shaval.

Are there any other ships here?

No. My analysis shows this sector to be without traffic. We are stationary in deepspace.

Will we stay here?

No Roivan. We will return to base.

When please?

It is not my concern. I do not count time.

What do you do at base?

I wait, until the ship travels again.

Unsure as to what else to say Roivan withdrew her mind. Deepspace? What was deepspace? She had to go to human-space. Was that far from deepspace? Was it the same? Unable to answer her own questions, she concentrated instead upon the fact that there would be other ships. There would be, Shaval said so, but when?

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