Sean Randall reviewed Space winners by Gordon R. Dickson
Review of 'Space winners' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Predictable in outline, but a solid genre piece for its time. Had the feel of a magazine work. Enjoyed.
205 pages
English language
Published Feb. 11, 1986 by Tom Doherty Associates.
They were humanity's hope - the first young people selected to leave Earth for study in the Galactic Federation. But something went wrong in deep space. Terribly wrong. Suddenly Jim Rawlins, Ellen Bouvier, Curt Harrington, and the squirrel-like Alien philosopher Peep were castaways, stranded on the Quarantined World of Quebahr - with no training, and little hope of rescue. Between them and the Federation's emergency beacon were primitive Mauregs, aggressive Walats, lizard-like Noifs - plus danger, conspiracy, and the mystery of an impending high-tech war on a backward, peaceful planet.
Without warning, the future of two worlds - Earth and Quebahr - depended on three young humans' ability to adopt and survive.
Predictable in outline, but a solid genre piece for its time. Had the feel of a magazine work. Enjoyed.