The Quantum Rose Audiobook By Catherine Asaro cover art

The Quantum Rose

A Novel of the Skolian Empire

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The Quantum Rose

By: Catherine Asaro
Narrated by: Anna Fields
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The Saga of the Skolian Empire is Catherine Asaro's trademark series. It chronicles the lives of the members of the ruling family of the Empire in the distant interstellar future, weaving a fine blend of action, romance, and hard science fiction.

The Quantum Rose is the story of Kamoj Argali, the young ruler of an impoverished province on a backward planet. To keep her people from starving, she has agreed to marry Jax Ironbridge, ruler of the prosperous neighboring province. But before they can be wed, Kamoj is forced into marriage with a mysterious stranger from a distant planet, throwing her world into utter chaos.

The best way to listen to this series: Primary Inversion (Unabridged) The Radiant Seas (Unabridged) The Last Hawk (Unabridged) Ascendant Sun (Unabridged) The Quantum Rose (Unabridged) Catch the Lightning (Unabridged)©2000 Catherine Asaro (P)2004 Blackstone Audiobooks
Adventure Fantasy Nebula Award Science Fiction Space Opera

Critic reviews

  • Nebula Award, 2001

Beautiful Descriptions • Competent Plotting • Reasonable Narration • Incredible Storyline • Good Story Concept

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The story is pretty much like a soap opera. There are the steamy scenes with the a young woman and an older man. There is treachery, betrayal, and conflict. Its a quick book and the performance is very good. The book name and the name of all the characters is pretty interesting once you figure it out. I was somewhat disappointed that this was a Nebula award winner, but it was a quick read and kept my attention.

Soap Opera Sci-FI

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This is the first Skolian Empire book I've read. It's good, and I like it. It's a good companion for the mindless labor I have to do for the next few days, It's well-written and competently plotted ,and the romance is fun.

However. I'm on chapter 5 and so far there've been one scientific inaccuracy and two evolutionary impossibilities that should have been edited out.

The people on the planet have either to be a result of parallel evolution or descendants of human space travelers, with human DNA. [I suspect the latter--how else could they interbreed?] Asaro gave them physical characteristics that preclude either possibility. The hero's response to oxygen deprivation was spot on; so she really should have looked up how the human brain reacts to an oxygen-rich environment.

The Audible bio says Asaro is a physicist who belongs to a seriously talent-rich writers' group. I expect she knows something of evolution and biology---you can't get a BS in any science or technical field without taking physics, chemistry and biology along with the math, even if you love one subject and would rather be beat with a stick than take the other two.

I suspect that a writer with her educational credentials knows her stuff. I'm wondering if she and her readers decided that these discrepancies were too trivial to matter and were less important than the development of the fictive world.

Logic counts. The little things matter. And just you get one thing wrong, no matter how arcane, and somebody will always write you to tell you about it.

AND I LIKE THIS BOOK. I'D RECOMMEND IT TO ANYBODY!

It's the little things that count.

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The story concept was good, but there are a lot of places where conflict starts up and then just fizzles out without any real tension. Could have been better written. Great characters, though.

Not one of Asaro's best, but still a good read.

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I was hoping this would be better than "Catch the Lightening" and more like "Primary Inversion", her first 2 books of the series...but it sort of fell in the middle for me. The plot was hard to grasp, because the main focus of the book was the romance. The one thing I really like about Asaro's writing is her beautiful descriptions of other worlds with their multiple moons, stained-glass forests, exotic creatures...and that's the only reason I will keep reading her, because the plots and the characters just don't have a lot of depth.

ok, but barely!

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Catherine Asaro's The Quantum Rose is set in the Skolian universe series. The tale begins on a primitive world that has a history of being an engineered slave world that went feral. A prince of the dynasty goes there to hide out, falls for the governor of an impoverished province and marries her, upsetting the plans of a more powerful adjacent province. Genetic characteristics create the numerous conflicts. Eventually the Ruby prince and his bride depart for his home world which is also under occupation. He leads a planet wide Gandhian civil disobedience to liberate his world.

The beauty and beast theme is crudely reprised (the prince must wear a breathing mask). The governor as beauty sacrifices for her province and the genetic restrictions make assertive actions difficult. The shift to the prince's home world seems almost like a separate tale where beauty plays a smaller role as public opinion is swayed with video footage. The issues back on the original world are eventually solved by lawyers.

The narration is reasonable with modest character distinction.

Disjointed sci-fi beauty and beast tale

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