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  • Prize of Gor

  • Gorean Saga, Book 27
  • By: John Norman
  • Narrated by: Tabitha Marley
  • Length: 31 hrs and 52 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (5 ratings)
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Prize of Gor

By: John Norman
Narrated by: Tabitha Marley
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Summary

John Norman's epic Gorean Saga is one of the longest-running and most successful series in the history of fantasy. It is also one of the most controversial. Over the course of more than 30 books produced over a span of six decades, the series has sold millions of copies and built legions of fans unrivaled in their devotion. Audible invites you to rediscover this brilliantly imagined world where men are masters and women live to serve their every desire.

Ellen is a beautiful young slave girl on the planet Gor. Yet she was not always thus. For nearly 60 years she was a woman of Earth, but life had largely passed her by. Then, following an apparently chance encounter at the opera with a strangely familiar young man, she finds herself transported from Earth to Gor. Here she discovers the true identity of her kidnapper and his sinister motives. She is given a strange drug that reverses the aging process, turning back time itself, and once again she's the beautiful young woman she remembers from years before, so long ago. Now her adventures really begin. Men challenge one another to own her. To the victor the spoils, but who will that victor be?

©2008 John Norman (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

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    2 out of 5 stars

Decent performance of the worst Gor novel.

The story is incredibly limited, very little actually happens and what does is squeezed in between endless polemic. Norman's style has a tendency towards the verbose, with every adjective having multiple versions in the same sentence, this novel is the worst offender for that. This bogs down the pace of a novel which mostly deals in vituperative rage. I listened to the audio book as I did not fancy wading through the enormous paperback again.

As to the performance, Tabitha Marley does well with it. I found some of her pronunciations odd and her attempts to do male voices bore some very strange results, yet that is usually the way with cross gender voice acting and cannot be seen as solely a faultvwith her performance

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