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Jean Johnson

Reviewed by John Hulet
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Jean Johnson
Jean Johnson has a Ph.D. in Religions and is the great-niece of the late Nunnally Johnson, award-winning screenwriter, director, and producer. Jean lives in the Pacific Northwest with her family. Learn more at Jean Johnson's website.



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Sons of Destiny — (2007-2011) Publisher: Eight brothers, born in four sets of twins, two years apart to the day — they fulfill the Curse of Eight Prophecy. To avoid tempting their destiny, the brothers are exiled to Nightfall Island, a land where women are strictly forbidden. But, when the youngest of the mage-brothers rescues a woman from another universe, their world is altered forever. Kelly Doyle had wanted to get away from the world. Threatened, attacked, and accused of witchcraft, Kelly had enough of her narrow-minded small town. And now she has somehow landed in another, magical dimension — the only woman in a realm inhabited by eight men who are desperately in need of a woman's touch.

paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 1. The Sword 2. The Wolf 3. The Master 4. The Song 5. The Cat paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 1. The Sword 2. The Wolf 3. The Master 4. The Song 5. The Cat paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 1. The Sword 2. The Wolf 3. The Master 4. The Song 5. The Cat paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 1. The Sword 2. The Wolf 3. The Master 4. The Song 5. The Cat paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 1. The Sword 2. The Wolf 3. The Master 4. The Song 5. The Cat
paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 6. The Storm 7. The Flame 8. The Mage 9. Finding Destiny paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 6. The Storm 7. The Flame 8. The Mage 9. Finding Destiny paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 6. The Storm 7. The Flame 8. The Mage 9. Finding Destiny paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 6. The Storm 7. The Flame 8. The Mage 9. Finding Destiny

PREQUEL SERIES TO SONS OF DESTINY — (2009-2012) Publisher: Centuries before the time of the Sons of Destiny, a female shapeshifter became the leader of the people of the Shifting Plains... Tava Ell Var never really knew her mother, but she did know her tragic fate at the hands of a band of cruel shapeshifters-a history set down by Tava's father as a warning about life on the Shifting Plains. But after her father is murdered, Tava encounters a Shifterai warband fighting to rid the Plains of the terrorizing bandits. Shifterai leader Kodan Sin Siin is sympathetic to Tava's suffering, but he's determined to bring the wary young woman to the Plains. Because he knows her secret: She, like he and his men, is a shapeshifter. Once she joins them, he knows that she will see for herself the true fate that awaits her on the Plains, and most of all, lose her fear of his people. And, in time, he knows she will find her place is in their fight-and by his side.

1. Shifting Plains 2. The Shifter paranormal romance reviews Jean Johnson Sons of Destiny 6. The Storm 7. The Flame 8. The Mage 9. Finding Destiny
 

Theirs Not to Reason Why — (2011-2012) Publisher: Ia is a precog, tormented by visions of the future where her home galaxy has been devastated. To prevent this vision from coming true, Ia enlists in the Terran United Planets military with a plan to become a soldier who will inspire generations for the next three hundred years-a soldier history will call Bloody Mary.

urban fantasy book reviews Jean Johnson Theirs Not to Reason Why 1. A Soldier's Duty 2. An Officer's Duty
Forthcoming:
An Officer's Duty
Hellfire
Damnation

urban fantasy book reviews Jean Johnson Theirs Not to Reason Why 1. A Soldier's Duty 2. An Officer's DutyA Soldier's Duty

urban fantasy book reviews Jean Johnson Theirs Not to Reason Why 1. A Soldier's Duty 2. An Officer's DutyJean Johnson's A Soldier's Duty, the first installment in her new science fiction series Theirs Not to Reason Why, is a pretty good book. From the standpoint of a sci-fi enthusiast it brings a lot of the critical elements together, such as extreme technology, alien races, and a space-faring society. In addition, Johnson creates a military backdrop that feels realistic. The result is a better than average novel.

Ia, the main character, is a psychically gifted woman from a heavy-gravity world. Her gift (or curse), the ability to see the future and to know what she has to do to achieve certain ends, is a potent tool. Johnson has created a strong female superhero and gives us reasonable explanations for how it all works. Ia's physical strength and incredible endurance come from being born and growing up on a world where the gravity is livable, but so heavy that there are marked physiological advantages when she moves to Earth's lower gravity. Also, her psychic abilities — and she has lots of them — are derived from the interactions of an alien race with her planet. So, this didn't just happen, but was a result of a series of logical events.

The entire human race, and civilization as it exists, is under a huge threat. When she was young, Ia had visions of the future that shock her and turn her into a singly focused, ridiculously dedicated avatar. In order to be the perfect and only solution, Ia begins planning, training and living for that single role. (It's kind of hard to believe, really, because of the constant pressure she would live under for so long.)

A Soldier’s Duty chronicles Ia's enlistment into the future version of the Marines. Johnson does a good job of carrying over the tradition, esprit de corps and mindset that the modern US Marine Corps embodies. There are moments of levity and instances of detailed exposition, but mostly we are watching a prophet of the future working to achieve the result that she has foreseen as the only way to save society.

On the whole, I enjoyed A Soldier's Duty as a sci-fi novel. I didn't like Ia; she was kind of boring because she never let up and only rarely felt sorry for herself. There were other characters in the novel who were more interesting and will hopefully be given more attention in future additions to Theirs Not to Reason Why. I’ve added this series to my list of books to read in the future, but it will probably not be at the top of the list.John Hulet


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