The Blood Createspace BookCoverImage 2-7-15Only the one known as The Blood can save the people of Lrakira.

Renloret pilots a search mission to Teramar but when his ship crashes, leaving him the sole survivor, he must request assistance from the natives of Teramar to find the child whose blood carries the cure for his people— without revealing that he is an alien.

Against protocol, Renloret finds himself falling in love with his rescuer, a beautiful and talented Teramaran blade ring champion, Ani, who is struggling with her own issues.

When the child cannot be found and Ani is harassed by a local general, Renloret, Ani, and Ani’s telepathic dog team up with the local sheriff to track down the child and beat the general at his own game.

The stakes are even greater than any of them know because the future of both worlds hangs in the balance.

 

FOUR STAR REVIEW from Forward Clarion Review . . . May 12, 2016

Allynn Riggs has created a world both familiar and strange, and is in good company with the best science fiction and fantasy.

Allynn Riggs’s The Blood mixes science fiction and fantasy to good effect in a tale laced with humor, tragedy, and romance.

The fates of two worlds hang in the balance when the Lrakiran pilot Renloret is sent on a mission to the planet Teramar to return a former Stone Singer’s child whose blood is the only cure for the plague decimating Lrakiran women. Renloret’s spacecraft crashes on the northern continent, and he is the only survivor. Blade champion Ani and her telepathic dog, Kela, investigate the crash site, find Renloret, and help him recover from his injuries. What they learn about each other leads them to a confrontation with an unbalanced military man and the truth about Renloret’s home planet.

Themes prevalent in The Blood are skillfully rendered, and its heavy topics prompt much reflection. The consequences of power when it is used for personal gain, the effects of culture shock, and the undeniable power of love in all forms inform various parts of the novel, though sections that focus on such topics are subtle rather than preachy.

Unique verbiage helps situate the audience in the book’s otherworldly environments almost immediately, as with the frustrate exclamatory use of “Blades!”; sometimes, however, there is a bit too much internal reflection included. World-building, including insights into particular world views, is accomplished efficiently, and the nature of the Stones comes through poetically, though sometimes emphasis on drawing bigger connections inhibits scenes. This is true of a scene at a village social event, where the text exhibits an obvious love for dance through its metaphors, though this twenty-plus-page scene is perhaps stretched out too long.

Characters throughout are rendered with depth and complexity, and the nuances of their back stories play out in important ways through the narrative. Previous events in Ani’s life resulted in her development of PTSD, which is revealed in just the right place and helps in making sense of her avoidance of combat. Similarly, traumatic events weaken her desire for revenge and cause her to make key, life-threatening mistakes. Riggs shows trauma’s effects on Ani with grace and compassion. Less complex individuals are also rendered well, as with military men driven primarily by a sense of patriotism. Renloret’s interest in diplomacy keeps him from being just another bullheaded, violent soldier.

The Blood is the beginning of an adventure that portends the further growth of Ani and Renloret’s relationship and the development of diplomatic relations between their two worlds. Riggs has created a world both familiar and strange, and is in good company with the best science fiction and fantasy.

  -- J.G. STINSON

 

REVIEW: A rescue mission crash lands - is it the end or a new beginning?. . . While this story contains a romance, it is understated and suitable for young adult readers. The engaging story reminds me of Anne McCaffrey’s interplanetary books . . . crystals, swords and a potential cure are a heady mix in the space fantasy.
  -- Clare O’Beara, Dublin, Ireland, for Fresh Review and on Amazon. Read her full review at http://freshfiction.com/review.php?id=50967

 

REVIEW: The Blood reminds me of the great science fiction and fantasy I enjoyed reading while in college during the 1960s and 70s before those genres became harsh, cold and violent. I can hardly wait for the second installment!
  -- Joe Wingard, Boulder, Colorado

2014 EVVY Merit for Cover Design - The Blood
2014 EVVY Science Fiction - The Blood1
2014 EVVY Fantasy - the Blood

 

REVIEW: Very good sci-fi story, the storyline excellent and flowed so smoothly easy to follow page after page. . . Enough action and excitement mixed in with the dancing and singing, complete. How did the author fit in mind-reading between Ani and Kela and to top it off a dog? Now that took some imagination there. . . I kind of equate this sci-fi to stories back in the 1970s, same genre. Classic read and very enjoyable and one story to peak your curiosity and keep it peaked until you reach the end.
  -- Dalene Cruz, on Amazon

 

REVIEW: If you’re looking for alien romance, telepathic talking dogs, and other-worldly culture/religion, this story delivers . . . along with a few unexpected twists.
  -- Terry Wright, Denver, Colorado,  author, editor, and publisher

 

REVIEW: “I love crossover genre fiction, and Allynn Riggs’ new SF/Fantasy delivers in both categories. Through a satisfying read that’s well thought out, well-paced, and strongly character-driven, the tale combines the best of space opera with an intriguing paranormal twist that has the feel of a whole fantasy epic. That;s a good thing for us, since this is the first book in a very promising series. Sure to find an enthusiastic audience.”

  -- Dr. Mark Todd, program director of Western State Colorado University's MFA in Creative Writing and author of SF and fantasy, including the award-winning Silverville Saga series.