Download The Gathering Edge: Liaden Universe: Theo Waitley, Book 5 AudioBook Free
A series milestone once we welcome the 20th amazing entrance in the nationally best-selling Liaden World® series. The luck runs rough around Theo Waitley. Not only are people trying to destroy her and get the self-aware brilliant ship, Bechimo, to whom Theo is bonded, they're also trying to arrest her team membersand toss the dignity of the important passenger, the duly constituted norbear ambassador Hevelin, into question. No think about Theo and her team felt the necessity for an escape and retired from what Bechimo identifies as "safe space". Sadly, safe space might not be so safe ever again. It seems that things are leaking through from another universe and another time. Actually entire spaceships are coming through. One particular ships is a blasted battleship apparently fleeing a long-lost battle. What's more, its team may be members of Theo's ancient ancestral series - her family members. It's sure that they may be in dire need of help. Theo has an option to make. It seems that Bechimo's "safe space" is about to become deadly perilous. Maine-based freelance writers Sharon Lee and Steve Miller teamed up in the late 1980s to bring the world the storyplot of Kinzel, an inept wizard with a love of pet cats, a thirst for justice, and an employee of true electric power. Since that time, the couple have written a large number of short stories and much more than 20 books, most set in their star-spanning Liaden World®. Before settling right down to the serene and stable life of a research fiction and illusion article writer, Steve was a visiting poet, a rock-band reviewer, a reporter, and editor of a string of community newspapers. Sharon, less adventurous, has been an advertising copywriter, a copy editor on night-side media at a little city paper, a reporter, a professional photographer, and a reserve reviewer. Both credit their paper experiences with coaching them the finer factors of cooperation. Sharon and Steve passionately assume that fiction ought to be fun and that experiences are entertainment.