She and Rukh can’t communicate because he doesn’t have any language, but she decides within a couple of weeks that she’s in love with him. Harlow basically sighs and shrugs off the fact that the two males she left behind are probably dead now, and decides to relax and roll with the whole kidnapping thing so she won’t have to go back and get yelled at. The only word I could come up with to describe the first part of this book was ‘laughable’. While this happens, she’s bashed over the head by an unaffiliated alien named Rukh and literally dragged off to his cave. While out on a rescue mission with two other aliens, Harlow is sent to find help. This khui knowledge comes courtesy of the aliens who already live on the planet, the seven-foot tall and blue ice planet barbarians who give the series its name. Second, the khui, or symbiote implanted into the chests of inhabitants to allow them to survive, also cured her terminal brain tumor. First, she was saved from a future of slavery. Harlow was saved in two ways when the ship transporting her and other humans crashed on an ice planet (creatively called Not-Hoth). If mediocre Clan of the Cave Bear fanfic is a brand that calls your name, Ruby Dixon’s Barbarian Mine is the read for you! (This is book two of twenty-two in Dixon’s long running Ice Planet Barbarians series.)
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