Headsets

Headsets

Computers

Computers

Laptops

Laptops

Load image into Gallery viewer, Dun Lady's Jess
Load image into Gallery viewer, Dun Lady's Jess
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Dun Lady's Jess
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Dun Lady's Jess
Vendor
Red Deer Press

Dun Lady's Jess

4.3
Regular price
€30,00
Sale price
€30,00
Regular price
€48,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 38% (€18,00)
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.

  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Red Deer Press

Shipping and Returns

  • We offer tracked shipping on all orders. Tracking information will be shared as soon as the order is dispatched.
  • Please check the delivery estimate before adding a product to the cart. This is displayed for every product on the website.
  • Available shipping methods and charges will be displayed at the time of checkout, depending on your exact location.
  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

Excellent!This book had me almost from page one. Ms Durgin has created and presented a world that is not only believable, but is also true to itself. I wanted to interact with the characters. Of course, I was through her mind! The plot had enough surprises to keep me thoroughly engaged with the story. In fact much of the time I did not want to put the book down. Also the bane of e-books, typos and proofreading errors, were barely noticed - a major plus! I plan on reading the rest of the books in the series and expect to be as well entertained. I highly recommend this book for its fantastical and plausible story. 5It's really pretty well done. I liked it, and I look forward to reading the next book in the series, despite it being very diffeThis is not the normal type of story I choose. I was influenced to curiosity by the reviews. I'm really glad I gave it a try. It was an unusual approach to the body swapping/turned into an animal tropes, and I felt that it was handled very well, and in a unique manner. The pace was a little slow for me, but it worked well for the story. I don't want to give anything away, but I encourage readers to give this unusual story a try.A man on a mission and his horse are thrust into our world, and the horse is unexpectedly turned into a woman in passage. She manages to retain her sanity with the help of experienced horse people, new friends, and her loving rider, but she's still a horse on the inside. She learns more than anyone ever expected she could, and develops opinions, ideas, and goals of her own, but remains deeply committed to her rider, their mission, and to getting home.There are many questions about what will happen to her when they figure out how to get home, and questions about whether or not home will still be safe since their mission has been delayed.Even more questions arise when they are just as unexpectedly transported back to their own world--along with their new friends from this one.It's really pretty well done. I liked it, and I look forward to reading the next book in the series, despite it being very different from my regular reads. 4A unique, interesting, and sympathetic character in Jess the horse/womanFantasy books and movies have been rife with shape-shifting heroes and villains in recent years, mostly werewolves and vampires. The teaser for this book stood out from all that, however, in that it included a character who is transformed from a horse to a human. That intrigued me and so I read the Kindle version of the book.The story is solidly a fantasy set in a parallel world to current-day earth, called Camolen. Camolen is very similar to our world, and is very much an Earth II, but not a duplicate. While it is Earth and is inhabited by human beings and the same species of animals, it is not the same people and animals. The level of civilization seems to be more-or-less medieval with the world ruled, or at least led, by wizards. And their level of technology is very low, with most of the functions that we handle by technology and machines, being handled for them by magic.The storyline involves a spell that has been created by the good wizards (including the protag wizard, Arlen) that allows people to transcend dimensions and so travel between worlds (like between Camolen and our Earth). Work on the spell has been accomplished by a networking of the wizards via horse-riding couriers (which is less risky than using magic). But with the spell operational, the wizards are concerned that some of the less conscientious among them will use the spell to travel to other worlds to ravage them and bring back technology to wreak havoc in Camolen.One such bad wizard is a woman named, Calandre, who has found out about the worlds-traveling spell and is seeking to obtain it. So Arlen purposes to send his lead courier, Carey, to an associate wizard, Sherra, who will create a checkspell that will prevent unauthorized use of the world-transversing spell (this is commonly done for all major magic).It s crucial that Carey not get caught with the spell (contained in a gemstone) and the documentation that goes with it. Arlen warns him to invoke the spell to escape if anyone tries to capture him. His escape will be to another world, where he can invoke it again to return to a safe-house in Camolen (since a connection between worlds will follow him and so give him access to the magic in Camolen). He ll have to be careful, though, not to take along inadvertent stragglers within the spell s range. Got that?Now all of this struck me as pretty run-of-the-mill for fantasy stories and, while well-written, didn t really grab me. Still, it held my interest enough to stay with it. I suspect strong fans of this genre will have no trouble remaining involved with the story.So in a nutshell, Carey is attacked while on the road and flees riding his fast horse, Dun Lady s Jess (he calls her Lady ). To save his life and his mission, Carey is forced to invoke the worlds-transversing spell and it takes him and Lady to our Earth. One side effect of the spell is that is changes Lady into a woman.About half the book concerns the adventures of Carey and Lady on our Earth. They find they have been followed by a minion of Calandre and so most of the action is the chasing and battling between them.The strength of the book is the family of characters that develop around Carey and the transformed Lady (who as a woman is called, Jess ). Ms Durgin handles those characters and their relationships very well. She also does well in developing Jess as a character as both horse and human. Jess struggles to adjust to her new form are told believably and sympathetically, and are the fun of the book. And of course, there s the complication of the transfer of her feelings of devotion for Carey as a horse, to her love of him as a human.In the last half of the book, the action returns to Camolen where the worlds-traveling magic transforms Jess back to Lady. She is still a Point-Of-View character, however, and Ms Durgin handles those scenes well and we continue to pull for Lady as we pulled for Jess. We also see development in the other protagonist characters and their adjustments to a world where technology is replaced by magic.Dun Lady s Jess won the Compton Crook for Best First SF/F/H of the Year (in 2013, I suppose) and has a devoted following for it and it s two sequels (it would make a good TV series, I think). And while it is a good book well written with a great hook of the horse-to-human angle, and infused with an obvious love for horses, I do have a few criticisms.First, while Ms Durgin does a good job with the characterizations of the protagonists, she leaves the antagonists (especially the bad wizard, Calandre) rather flat. We don t really know what motivates Calandre other than just being a psychopath, and she s not in very many scenes. Most of the bad work is done by Calandre s minions and they are mostly just expendables without character. Actually, I think even Arlen could have been developed some more.The idea of magic being used instead of technology in Camolen was kind of interesting but not quite believable to me. I did like, however, the idea that using magic has consequences of collateral damage and side-effects. Overall, though, the main storyline of the conflict between wizards struck me as weak. I didn t get a feel of high stakes, and what battling there was between the wizards seemed to abbreviated.Still, there were moments of insight that appealed to me. Like when Arlen asks Jaime (the horse expert) if there were evil people like Calandre on her world. She replies: Too many of them. Of course, they don t have magic to play with. They have to make do with guns and bombs and blind political fervor. There s a theme there that I think Ms Durgin could have enlarged on a bit.I did like this book. I think Ms Durgin has come up with a unique, interesting, and sympathetic character in Jess the horse/woman who should be able to sustain a series. Ms Durgin just needs to ramp up her storytelling a bit and expand her character development to the bad guys. 4) But I'm so glad one of my friends posted it to my FB ...This was one of those books that I'd always meant to read but could never remember the title (I'm not a horse person, so the title always came across as strange to me.) But I'm so glad one of my friends posted it to my FB wall!I found the premise interesting, even weird -- a horse transforms into a human but isn't a "shifter," but a horse with a human's body. That part is really well done, really convincing. The characters she makes friends with come across as real people... even/especially the horse. I'm definitely going to buy the rest of the series.Oh, this is a fantasy book, not a "shifter" romance. There is a tiny bit of romance, but only at the end, and it's not the focus of the story. 4Clever and Imaginative, even for non-horse lovers.This was a truly unique story, told from a different perspective. The lead character is a horse in one world, who is changed into a woman in modern day Ohio. Her senses, her expectations of the world, and her growth into an amazing and brave person, are narrated in a believable manner. The author paints a picture of a horse as a being with personality and value, and yet, does not diminish the idea of being human. The actual plot, which involves a courier and his horse escaping their world to protect a magic spell, enlisting the help of humans from our world to return and right the wrongs committed by the spell, is fast paced and well thought out. A unusual story, well executed. 4Brilliant, imaginative fantasy!I've read sci-fi and fantasy for over fifty yrs, but rarely have I encountered a more beautifully written story than Dun Lady's Jess. It makes every other shape-shifter series pale in comparison. I don't say that lightly, being a loyal fan of Eileen WIlks (Lupi), Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake) and Charlaine Harris (Sookie Stackhouse).If you are a horse-lover - and many girls are - you will instantly know that Ms. Durgin genuinely loves and understands horses. The mental confusion, the physical gestures - how a horse would behave if suddenly transformed into a human - are absolutely believable, with riveting yet succinct description.I give this my highest praise - I'm buying "Dun Lady's Jess" in its original paperback so I can add into my permanent collection alongside the classic horse tales by Marguerite Henry that were illustrated by Wesley Dennis. The beautiful cover art of "Dun Lady's Jess" will fit in perfectly. 5Interesting ConceptI really enjoyed this book and its premise. What WOULD happen if you turned an animal, ANY animal really, into a human without warning? How would the animal think? React? Would it eventually come to find it's human body in some ways superior to its animal one, or would it always want to turn back into its former self?What if it was a domestic animal such as a dog or, as in this case, a horse? Would it still carry that love for its master? Could its master accept its new form? Would something more form?Just a few questioned spawned by the first half of this book. The second half was no less exciting to read, but it was mostly your standard sword and sorcery. Lady/Jess was such a great and compelling character. The other characters were mere satellites around her, even Carey. I loved this book and look forward to reading the next in the series. 4Considering the Premise, Well WrittenHmmm, well it is no spoiler to say that this horse turns into a lady and then stuff happens. That is what this story is about. However, this author manages to write a very good story based on this premise. The reader can see the trials and tribulations of the horse, the people around her who have to believe this has happened versus having found a person who should be committed as she thinks she is a horse, and then to unfold an interesting story given the situation. If you can't get past the premise, you will miss a very interesting and well written book.I will admit that I will wait to read a few reviews before reading the next one, but I found this one entertaining. 4This is a first novel?It reads like an offering from a far more experienced writer. But then, I expected nothing less, by the time I actually read it. I discovered Doranna Durgin many years ago, but even then, Dun Lady's Jess was already out of print. I finally tracked it down at an online used book store. It was VERY hard to find... apparently, not many people who read it were willing to give it up. That should tell you something. I, myself, couldn't wait for the American edition of the re-issue... I bought the Canadian edition. HUGE thanks to Red Deer Press for reintroducing it!I have read and enjoyed other fantasies that involved shape-shifting--and I'm looking forward to Durgin's new one in the Silhouette 'Nocturne' line next year. But Dun Lady's Jess is a 'change' fantasy on an entirely different level. As a person, Jess has the instincts and sensibilities of a horse, but has to learn to use her new and expanded human brain power. As a horse, Jess is not a person in a horse's body, she's a horse, confused by the new scope of thought available to her horse's brain. This makes the whole story fascinating on a personal development and characterization level, as well as the actual intriguing plot-line of travel and adventure taking place across two very different dimensions. All the characters benefit from Durgin's talent at characterization, of course--like all her books--but Jess has, and always will have, a special place in my heart. The action ain't bad, either. Durgin excels at pacing a story to keep you turning pages far into the night.Also recommended: Changespell and Changespell Legacy (Baen Fantasy) continue the story. But I can confidently recommend any book Durgin's written. I've never read one from her I didn't like (and I have them all), no matter what the genre. 5Found a New Series to LoveWhat a wonderful book. I loved how the author looks at how it might be for a horse to become human and how she has to deal with all the strangeness. You really could feel how the horse/person was struggling with new sensations that a horse would not know about and how as a human, many of the horse characteristics were still there like swishing a non-existent tail. So very wonderfully written. All the other characters were developed with great care as well so that I really became attached to them and cared what happened to them. The story really held my interest, page after page and I was sorry to see it end. Looking forward to the next book in the series. A great read. Recommended for any horse lover and fantasy readers. 5
Dun Lady's Jess

Dun Lady's Jess

4.3
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€30,00
Sale price
€30,00
Regular price
€48,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 38% (€18,00)