Hoka! Hoka! Hoka! by Poul Anderson and Gordon R. Dickson

Related Posts
The Thief Who Couldn’t Sleep (Evan Tanner Book 1)

A “rousing, often comic” series debut featuring a globe-trotting spy with nothing to lose—even sleep—from the New York Times–bestselling author (Library Journal). Evan Michael Tanner hasn’t slept in more than a decade—not since a small piece of battlefield shrapnel invaded his Read more

For The Emperor (Ciaphas Cain Book 1) warhammer 40k

New to warhammer 40K universe? go there for a recommended reading order Unusually humorous take on the warhammer 40k universe starring Cain a cowardly commissar who's actions keeps getting him ever more dangerous duty assignments Omnibus version : book one, Read more

Hoka! Hoka! Hoka! by Poul Anderson and Gordon R. Dickson
Date:
MainCategory:
trope:
Lenght:
Reception:

THE HOKAS ARE BACK IN THIS CLASSIC OF HUMOROUS SF FROM POUL ANDERSON AND GORDON R. DICKSON.

The Interbeing League had been formed to make contact with new intelligent races in the galaxy and offer them membership. But when the League encountered the Hokas, furry creatures strongly resembling the teddy bears of Earth, the League’s agent, Alexander Jones, could have been excused for wishing he had a simpler assignment than making sense out of the Hokas—such as singlehandedly stopping an interstellar war.

Not that the fuzzy aliens were unfriendly. In fact, they loved everything about humans, and adopted various Terram cultures wholesale and in every little detail—but with a bit of confusion about the differences between fact and fiction. So, if the Hokas suddenly started outing out the parts in a rip-roaring, shoot-em-up western, or brought to life the London of Sherlock Holmes, complete with a pip-puffing, deerstalker-wearing Hoka, or suddenly decided to fly the Jolly Roger and lead a life of adventure and piracy on the high seas, mate—well, that was to be expected. And as the Hokas threw themselves wholeheartedly into progressively wilder worlds from Terran history and fiction, Jones could be excused for feeling that his grip on reality was hanging by a single, thin, increasingly frayed thread.

At the publisher’s request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).

Praise for the Hokas stories:

“You aren’t apt to find a more gleeful book of S.F.”—The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

“. . . the funniest s-f ever written.”—A Reader’s Guide to Science Fiction

 

Leave a Reply