Home
Home | Your Account | Order History | FAQs | Contact Us
  Member Login
You have 0 item(s) in your Shopping cart.
You have 0 item(s) in your Wish List
Using the Apple iPhone/iTouch with WebScriptions
Using the Amazon Kindle with WebScriptions
News & Updates
=Mission of Honor= by David Weber
=The Lotus Eaters= by Tom Kratman
=The Legacy of Gird= by Elizabeth Moon
more...

Search:



  John Joseph Adams
  Aaron Allston
  James G. Anderson
  Poul Anderson
  Christopher Anvil
  Catherine Asaro
  Chuck Asay
  Neal Asher
  Nancy Asire
  Robert Asprin
  Paolo Bacigalupi
  Jim Baen
  Kage Baker
  Margaret Ball
  Laird Barron
  Elizabeth Bear
  Greg Bear
  Clare Bell
  Gregory Benford
  Nigel Bennett
  Ben Bova
  Steven R. Boyett
  Leigh Brackett
  Marion Zimmer Bradley
  Jeff Bredenberg
  Poppy Z. Brite
  Damien Broderick
  Mary Brown
  M. M. Buckner
  Lois McMaster Bujold
  Jaqueline Carey
  Lillian Stewart Carl
  John F. Carr
  Jeffrey A. Carver
  Paul Chafe
  Jack L. Chalker
  A. Bertram Chandler
  C. J. Cherryh
  Julie Cochrane
  Hal Colebatch
  Stoney Compton
  Glen Cook
  Rick Cook
  Seamus Cooper
  Sharon Cooper
  Larry Correia
  John Dalmas
  Ellen Datlow
  L. Sprague deCamp
  John DeChancie
  Virginia DeMarce
  Andrew Dennis
  Bradley Denton
  Gordon R. Dickson
  William C. Dietz
  Thomas M. Disch
  Chris Dolley
  James Doohan
  L. Warren Douglas
  David Drake
  Dave Duncan
  Doranna Durgin
  Rosemary Edghill
  George Alec Effinger
  Greg Egan
  Harlan Ellison
  P. N. Elrod
  Terry England
  Linda Evans
  Philip Jose Farmer
  Bill Fawcett
  Leslie Fish
  Eric Flint
  Michael Flynn
  Judy Forward
  Robert L. Forward
  Leo Frankowski
  Dave Freer
  David Friedman
  Esther Friesner
  Randall Garrett
  Roberta Gellis
  Mark Geston
  Scott Gier
  James C. Glass
  Tom Godwin
  Arlene Golds
  Paula Goodlett
  Roland Green
  Martin Harry Greenberg
  Dave Grossman
  James E. Gunn
  Ellen Guon
  Joe Haldeman
  Edmond Hamilton
  Matthew Harrington
  Robert A. Heinlein
  John Helfers
  John G. Hemry
  P. C. Hodgell
  James P. Hogan
  Cecelia Holland
  Sarah Hoyt
  Matthew Hughes
  Dean Ing
  Graham Joyce
  Richard Kadrey
  William H. Keith Jr.
  Caitlín R. Kiernan
  Jeffery D. Kooistra
  Marilyn Kosmatka
  Paul Kozerski
  Tom Kratman
  Henry Kuttner
  Mercedes Lackey
  Jay Lake
  John Lambshead
  John Langan
  Joe R. Lansdale
  Keith Laumer
  Tim Lebbon
  Sharon Lee
  Fritz Leiber
  Murray Leinster
  Edward M. Lerner
  Holly Lisle
  Brian Lumley
  Nathalie Mallet
  Barry N. Malzberg
  Mark O. Martin
  Anne McCaffrey
  Jack McDevitt
  Charles C. McGraw
  Shirley Meier
  Steve Miller
  Elizabeth Moon
  Modean Moon
  Howard L. Myers
  Larry Niven
  Ted Nolan
  Andre Norton
  Jody Lynn Nye
  Norvell W. Page
  Jerry Pournelle
  Cherie Priest
  Hank Reinhardt
  Mike Resnick
  John Ringo
  Richard Roach
  Spider Robinson
  Selina Rosen
  Joel Rosenberg
  Rudy Rucker
  Fred Saberhagen
  Pamela Sargent
  John Scalzi
  Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
  James H. Schmitz
  Martin Scott
  Mark Sebanc
  Michael Shea
  Charles Sheffield
  Mark Shepherd
  Susan Shwartz
  Robert Silverberg
  Dan Simmons
  William Mark Simmons
  Cordwainer Smith
  L. Neil Smith
  Walter Spence
  Wen Spencer
  Ryk Spoor
  D. W. St. John
  Marc Stiegler
  S. M. Stirling
  Johnathan Strahan
  Charles Stross
  Tim Sullivan
  Michael Swanwick
  Howard Tayler
  Travis S. Taylor
  Mark Teppo
  Brian M. Thomsen
  Mark Tier
  Harry Turtledove
  Mark L. Van Name
  Patrick A. Vanner
  A. E. Van Vogt
  Vernor Vinge
  Karl Edward Wagner
  Lars Walker
  David Weber
  T. K. F. Weisskopf
  K. D. Wentworth
  Steve White
  Liz Williams
  Walter Jon Williams
  Michael Z. Williamson
  Robert Charles Wilson
  Timothy Zahn
  Roger Zelazny
$AltText


$AltText

Previous  Up  Next" 
Hell Hath No Fury
by David Weber and Linda Evans

GATEWAY TO HELL'S FURY

The Union of Arcana has expanded through the portals linking parallel universes for over a century and a half. In that time, its soldiers and sorcerers have laid claim to one uninhabited planet after another—all of them Earth, and in the process, the Union has become the most powerful, most wealthy civilization in all of human history. But now the Union's scouts have discovered a new portal, and on its far side lies another human society, Sharona, which has also been exploring the Multiverse, and the first contact between them did not go well. Arcana is horrified by the alien weapons of its sudden opponents, weapons its sorcerers cannot explain, weapons based upon something called . . . science. But Sharona is equally horrified by Arcana's "magical" weapons. Neither side expected the confrontation and each thinks the other fired first. But as the initial disastrous contact snowballs into all-out warfare, both sides can agree on one thing. The portal which brought them together is Hell's Gate itself!

"Magic and high tech collide in this exciting military SF novel from bestseller Weber and Evans, the first of a new series. . . . The authors treat both societies sympathetically and realistically, with human vices and virtues evenly distributed."—Publishers Weekly

Published 3/1/2007
SKU: 1416521011
Ebook Price: $6.00 

Hell's Gate
Hell's Gate
Yellow Eyes
Yellow Eyes
1634: The Baltic War
1634: The Baltic War
Korval's Legacy Collection
Korval's Legacy Collection


W200703 March 2007 WebScription
W200703 March 2007 WebScription
$15.00
W200807 July 2008 WebScription
W200807 July 2008 WebScription
$15.00
   





Product Rating: (4.31)   # of Ratings: 35   (Only registered customers can rate)

(Only registered customers can rate)

1 - Terrible
2 - Bad
3 - OK
4 - Good
5 - Great
0% 50% 100%

Sort: New to Old RE-SORT COMMENTS:

Showing comments 1-10 of 22 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
1. John on 6/16/2009, said:

Love the book and the series (so far), BUT I'm really disappointed that David Weber has partnered with Linda Evans on this. She is notorious for leaving sequels unfinished, and I fear this series will be left in the dust. David, if you want to get out of your arrangement with Evans and finish the next book on your own, call me and I'll provide free legal advice and services to help make it happen (assuming you didn't sign something stupid when you went into this joint venture with Evans).
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (1 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
2. A. J. on 11/15/2008, said:

Fantastic reads, both books! I want more in this series. I think he's busy with the Honor Harrington stuff though. This book absolutely deserves a sequel especially with that dang cliff hanger on it. For that matter, while I'm at it, Bahzell books could use another installment too.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (2 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
3. Preston on 10/21/2008, said:

This is a great book, i loved it. BUT there are a few things i didn't like about it. They are the cliffhanger ending, and that there is no mention of the next book. At this rate i dont know if i will ever live to see the next book in this series...and i'm only 18!
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (2 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
4. Paul on 8/8/2008, said:

Where is the third book. The other two where excellent.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (5 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
5. Duane on 7/28/2008, said:

enjoyed it, they took a basic story and gave it a real reality twist. good charicters. I hope the third book is in the works.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (4 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
6. Rob on 7/17/2008, said:

I liked both books so far but has anyone seen any indication of when if ever the next book will come out?
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (5 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
7. Verlon on 5/28/2008, said:

Don't get me wrong, I like Weber's work. This cliffhanger ending stuff is utter crap and needs to go away. I almost didn't buy this one after the way Hell's Gate ended. And the Author's page here says he's working on 3 books for 2009 and NONE of them are in this series. I hope that's wrong.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (3 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
8. David on 5/18/2008, said:

Even though I read the comments before adding this to my rading of Hell's Gate and knew there'd be a cliffhanger, I bought it. And read it. Good read. Even the cliffhanger's not all that bad (clue: IMO, the answer to the cliffhanger's in Chapter 36 of "Hell's Gate"... and elsewhere. Just sayin' :-)) On other plot points, wouldn't it be nice if Jathmar and Shaylar's idiosyncratic "problem" could be solved by... chocolate? :-) (Although, I'd prefer either coffee or beer to be the magic potion.)
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (2 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
9. James on 3/17/2008, said:

The book is great, but, I should have expected the ending. Cliffhangers suck! Now I have to wait for the next in the series...there could have been a warning!
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (4 people found this comment helpful, 1 did not)
10. Monica on 12/29/2007, said:

Excellent sequel; I'm not surprised at the slower pace, as there are obviously some deep-laid plans going on in the background which will take a while to build up to. For example, if the other book (books?) ever come out, I'm really interested in finding out what's going on with the cetaceans. And that's just a minor part of the story. My complaint is the dratted cliffhanger ending. Aside from loathing them in general, it always makes me wonder if I'll ever actually see the continuation. Especially with the glaring example of co-author Evans' "Far Edge of Darkness"; published in 1996, ends in a cliff-hanger scene, and have we ever heard a peep about the sequel or further? No. There are far too many other examples out there of cliffhangers which never had sequels - or took 20 years to get them published - for me to be comfortable with the idea. And with an e-book, we don't even have the option of checking the end of the book to make sure it isn't a cliffhanger before we buy it. Not to mention these have such abrupt endings that it's totally jarring, and tends to tick people off. It's a practice I certainly hope Baen doesn't intend to start depending on. If they are going to publish a lot of cliffhangers, it'd be nice to have some warning. These aren't the days of serializing Dickens! If the entire series is going to be like this, I'd like to know ahead of time, and have some assurance that the rest of the books *will* be published. Unreasonable, maybe, considering how the business works, not to mention acts of god in the lives of the authors; but what good is a partial series to a customer? I'd rather wait until all the books are safely out, then buy them. Of course, one might not sell so many books that way...
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (11 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
Showing comments 1-10 of 22 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
                                         Copyright © 2007 WebScription.net All Right Reserved.

Site Map