![]() ![]() ![]() Parts of it are smoking hot, and carefully strike the balance of remaining tasteful, being first and foremost a love story, and providing the reader with some truly eye popping moments. And that's fine, because in another bizarre twist, it turns out that the pair are a perfect sexual match, and that's where the novel gets quite steamy, well, so long as the reader is okay with reading about alien-human sexual encounters. Struggling to find help on Not-Hoth, George encounters Vektal, a large, blue alien, who immediately falls in love with her and claims her as her mate. Along the way, the ship crashes into an ice planet, known (of all the tricky, deceptive things,) as Not-Hoth. It tells the story of Georgie, a young woman who is abducted by aliens, who are a part of a bizarre intergalactic trafficking scheme, that involves human women aged in their twenties. It turns out that Ice Planet Barbarians is a little of all three. Was this science fiction? A romance? A blend of the two? Or was it something that was better described as, so bad its good. ![]() ![]() I had no idea what Ice Planet Barbarians was, exactly, when I found a copy in the Science Fiction and Fantasy section of my local bookshop. ![]()
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