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More Books than Time

Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Saving Paludis by Clayton Graham – Science Fiction I Could Not Finish

June 29, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The publishers kindly provided my a complimentary copy of Saving Paludis to review through NetGalley but I simply cannot get past about 40% of the novel.  The characters and plot are all over the place, disorganized and incoherent, and not enjoyable.  I read to enjoy so this one is, sadly, a Did Not Finish.

The basic plot is Earth has colonized Paludis and shoved the natives to a small peninsula.  Now the natives have managed to attack Earth (apparently it is the natives or some other unknown race from the same planet, it isn’t real clear at the 40% point) for revenge? freedom? (also not clear).  The human colonists meanwhile have discovered a sleeping pill that enables long hibernation without side effects, thus opening more of the galaxy to exploration and exploitation.  It’s not real clear yet why the sleeping pill and attacks on Earth are connected, or even whether they are connected; after reading so far I’d expect some hints that the novel is pulling together the disparate strands.

There are three main characters per the blurb, but it isn’t entirely clear what the other characters are doing or why they are present.  The novel is uneven in narrative flow, pacing, character development and plot, and I cannot keep focused.  Please note that many of the Amazon reviews are 4 and 5 stars, so I may be the outlier.

I am very sorry, but I cannot read any more.  There are far too many other books out there to enjoy.

2 Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: Book Review, Did Not Finish, Not So Good, Science Fiction

Flicker, Ember in Space Book One by Rebecca Rode – Boring Science Fiction About a Clairvoyant Gypsy

June 12, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Rebecca Rode’s Flicker, Ember in Space Book One, features Ember, a Roma or Gypsy, one of the very few folks left on Earth after a mass migration a few centuries before.  Now the Earth is a tiny part of an empire that spans many star systems, ruled by the absolute Emperor whose will is enforced by ruthless military force.  Ember supports her father and herself by telling fortunes in the marketplace to tourists until ruthless General Kane kidnaps her for her clairvoyant skill.

The book is boring.  I read about 50% of the way through and skimmed the rest, hoping it would improve, but it doesn’t.  Ember should be a sympathetic character but I didn’t care one way or the other.  General Kane is odious, bloodthirsty, cruel, ambitious.  The author describes two societies, the Roma on Earth and the militarized world that Ember must face, and neither is appealing or admirable.  Basically there was nothing in the novel to engage one and make the reader feel part of the story.

2 Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 2 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

Mini Reviews – Science Fiction Books from So-So to Really Bad

June 2, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Remnants of Hope by Antoine Henderson, Science Fiction, Space Pirates

Remnants of Hope< is a freebie from an author launching his new novel, Rogue Star.  Remnants of Hope uses the same characters.

The main problem with this novel is the characters are lifeless.  We have the noble smuggler Taran, his friend?/lover?/second-in-command? former/current assassin Nadal-Ti, fearful alien technical genius Blurb and faithful android/ship’s computer Delta-811.  We never learn much about Nadal-Ti and the others are stock characters.

Plot uses a pirate attack, indigenous people whom Delta-811 can somehow understand, a strange and never-described star system with lots of planets and cut off from all other star systems.  The story never really comes together.

The writing is not bad but it’s also not very good.  I read it on vacation while dodging cold rain so managed to finish.  I will not look for further stories by this author.

3 Stars

Star Cat Origins by Andrew Mackay, Prequel Freebie for the Star Cat Series

Star Cat is a cute, clean longer novella that author Andrew Mackay gives away to introduce us readers to his Star Cat Feline Space Opera.  It is cute and sweet, with a five year old Jamie and his cat.  Jamie’s dad dies at the beginning and his mom is heartbroken; Jamie is too young to fully appreciate death but he’s not happy either.

The space program is desperate to find a way to respond to an unknown signal from Saturn, which may be a distress call, and notice that cats seem to respond to the message.  Jamie sees the ad asking cat owners to enter their cats in the Cat Trials, which is in Book 2, Star Cat: Infinity Claws

Star Cat is well-written but not for me.  If I were pre teen I’d probably like it.

3 Stars

Lunacy on Omega Station: A Pulp Superhero Space Opera (The Shattered Cosmos Book 0) by Chucho Jones


This is bad.  Really bad.  Ridiculous plot, ridiculous characters, poor writing, boring.

1 Star

Waning Chance (The School of Ancestral Guidance Saga) Book 1.5 by Thorn Osgood


In all fairness I did not read the first book in this series nor did I finish this one.  It was written OK, just didn’t seem to go anywhere and was depressing to boot.  I was curious about the Ancestral Guidance stuff and the portals but not enough to keep reading when my books-to-read pile grows ever larger.

2 Stars

Star Warrior (Star Warrior Quadrilogy Book 1) by Isaac Hooke

Star Warrior starts well but I had to quit about half through.  We have Tane, a farm boy who gets semi-kidnapped/semi-rescued by two people with unusual mental powers…  Wait.  This is familiar!

Author Hooke brings in some unique twists.  He imagines a parallel but opposite universe that has all of our stuff but no people.  We can visit there, remove things, take them back to our universe, use them, and not affect them here.  The problem is the folks who live in this opposite universe attack on sight and some of them are equally advanced as the farm boy’s world.  Interesting concepts.

I took this on vacation and simply lost interest.  First hero Tane acts dumber and dumber and more annoying by the moment.  I wanted to smack him upside the head and tell him to grow up!  The skill level nonsense is annoying too.  Apparently in Tane’s world one can purchase nanite injections to get new abilities or to augment existing abilities.  Tane is able to get injections that increase his dexterity and coordination, nice, huh?  Skill levels got boring about the third time, obnoxious by the seventh!

2 Stars

A Different Kind by Lauryn April

A Different Kind has an unusual lead character, Payton Carlson, head cheerleader, prom queen, the in girl, at least until the little grey men abduct her.  Payton rekindles an old friendship with the loner kid across the street, Logan, and discovers the Grey’s interest in her is not benign.

I got about half through A Different Kind and may go back and finish this one.  It is quite well written and author April develops Payton from a typical bratty popular kid into someone with more depth and character that I almost cared about.  It just didn’t quite tug my interest long enough.  Perhaps it’s a better read for a cozy winter evening.

 

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 2 Stars, Book Review, Not So Good, Science Fiction

Archangel Down – Solid Start to…? Alien Invasion Maybe? by C. Gockel

March 13, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Archangel Down starts a new series by C. Gockel that uses some of the same world and characters as her short story “Carl Sagan’s Hunt for Intelligent Life in the Universe”.  I liked the short story and was glad to see Noa Sato taking the lead in this novel.

The premise and world building are excellent.  The colonists on Luddeccea distrust technology in general and believe their time gate, which allows interstellar travel, has been invaded by non-corporeal aliens who can control people through their augments.  No one outside of the Luddecceans believes this story.

The story opens with Noa in a re-education camp with her ethernet port blocked, half starved and frozen, surrounded by others who have had artificial limbs torn away.  Noa escapes and meets James Sinclair, a professor who comes to Luddeccea for a vacation.  Sinclair is highly augmented and Noa knows the authorities will kill him if they can.

Noa hatches a plan to escape the planet and bring warning to the rest of the human worlds, to bring the navy to Luddeccea to stop the murders and rescue the people in the camps.

Weaker Points:  Pace and Character

The plot is choppy.  Noa and James must run and stay ahead of the authorities and the novel spends quite a bit of time on this, making for inconsistent pacing.  It also is a little unbelievable.  Noa has escaped from a concentration camp, is woefully malnourished, and gets a serious fungal lung infection.  Yet she is able to stay several steps ahead of the manhunt even while contacting others she believes can help.

The other point that hurts pacing is the author brings in some 20th century jokes, mostly allusions to Star Trek and Star Wars, plus some racial observations.  The jokes aren’t funny and the race stuff doesn’t add anything to the story.  (In Noa’s world most people are medium tan while she is dark and James is white and blond.)  These slow down the story and feel a little forced.

Noa is a strong character, albeit secondary, in the short story and provides the main point of view and lead.  We see she is loyal to a fault, strong-willed, serious, willing to trust people she knows, ready to love and support her friends.  She is also ruthless, smart, bold.  By the end of Archangel Down we feel like Noa is a real person, not necessarily a realistic one, but someone we want to read about.

James Sinclair provides point of view part of the novel but is more sketchy.  Sinclair realizes he cannot remember anything prior to a serious accident that resulted in him getting so many augments, but he worries that he may not be himself.  This helps explain the paucity of character development, but it left me feeling like he needs more work.

My favorite character is Carl Sagan, currently inhabiting a wherfle on the Ark with Noa.  The short story hints that The One, the individual minds that can inhabit wherfles or other semi-intelligent creatures, know about the dangerous aliens that are in the Time Gate.  I do hope that Noa and James figure out that Carl Sagan is a lot more than a cute pet who keeps the rats down.

Overall

Archangel Down opens a lot of plot strings and leaves us with lots of questions.  It is fairly well-written and interesting, with a good plot and interesting characters.  I intend to read the next book in the Archangel Project series, Noa’s Ark: Archangel Project. Book Two.  I debate between 3 and 4 stars because yes, I liked the book, yes I intend to read more, but it just isn’t quite as compelling as most 4 star novels.

3+ Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

Liquid Gambit by Bonnie Milani, Good World Building in a Novella

March 13, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Bonnie Milani offered her novella Liquid Gambit as a novella via a give away and it sounded interesting enough to try. In fact it is well-written, with interesting characters and back story.

We meet Rick, a Lupan, tending his bar in the down-and-out section of the next-to-the-bottom deck of space station Bogue Dast, aptly named “Hell” because it’s a short walk to the Void.  Most of Rick’s customers are seedy types with young pickpocket and con man Snicket standing out only because of his extreme Mohawk.  Rick hates slavers and kills them when he can, so far without being caught, although cop leader Bayliss is itching to get him for murder.

Rick decides to leave Bogue Dast while he can but needs a lot of money to pay off all the bribes to stations and polities who want him dead or alive.  He gets his chance when Snicket leaves a vial of Earth water – that he stole from the Mayor – under a bar stool for his mother to find and use to ransom his sister who is held by a slaver and destined for the Mayor.

The action proceeds as we can expect given the characters and the world-building.  The plot is good enough to carry the action and show us the people and setting.

Characters

The characters are the best part of the story.  Rick is the consummate hero, willing to help others even at the cost of his life and livelihood.  Policeman Bayliss is interesting, not completely a villain but definitely not a clean cop either.

Rick is the narrator and main character and Milani shows us inside his head and his personality by actions, words plus his memories and thoughts.  She does a good job letting us get to know Rick, what drives him.  Rick could have been just a stock character until Milani brings to life with her writing.

Overall

I liked the novella. I was surprised to see Bonnie Milani authored Home World, which I didn’t care for; she has written other novels and stories in the same universe.  Liquid Gambit shows people as people in difficult circumstances, all doing what they can to survive while acting with honor and morals, a satisfying foundation for story.

3-4 Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

Survival: A Novel (Star Quest Trilogy) by Ben Bova

January 30, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Survival is the first novel by Ben Bova that I have finished. Our library had Survival in the new book section, I was looking for something different and decided to try Bova again.  I’m glad I did because Survival is a decent read.

Characters

I liked the main character, Alexander Ignatiev.  He is a crotchety older man we meet first on a short trip to a close-by star.  He discovers their ship will not be able to gather enough hydrogen to power the life support systems and manages to mousetrap the AI running the ship into changing course.  We meet Ignatiev again in the main story when he leads a group of 2000 scientists on a mission to save a machine civilization 2000 light years away.

Ignatiev is interesting and likable, with a quick sense of humor and a bit of cynicism.  The other characters are sketchier and the machine civilization is flat, without personality.

I got very tired reading how dedicated the scientists are to their research, to the point where they are perfectly happy being fobbed off with a well-equipped lab when they could be digging into the intricacies of the machine civilization.  This felt off, even allowing for the single-mindedness one needs to be a world class researcher.

Plot and Story Telling

The first part of the novel, the trip to Gliese 581, doesn’t do anything except set up Ignatiev as the man to watch.  It doesn’t fit into the rest of the story and feels like a novella the author decided to graft onto his main narrative.

The other part that I find extraordinarily jarring, unbelievable, is the machine civilization’s response to the human mission.  Initially the machines intend to trap the people on their planet, then let them die in the death wave, but somehow at the end, Ignatiev manages to convince them that it would be more fruitful, more interesting, to cooperate with humans and the Predecessors to save and unite as many civilizations as possible.

We are supposed to believe that the machines, initially ambivalent about the humans, then became implacable, only to then decide, oh yeah, let’s band together.  Sorry, I don’t believe it.

I don’t believe in the whole machine civilization, sentient artificial intelligence world building either, but Bova tells the story well enough that I could nod and go on.

Writing Style

Bova writes quite well and puts in enough in-fighting and political jockeying to give the story some meat and make the people more believable.  He uses dialogue and introspection to advance the story and keep the pace moving.

Overall

Jack McDevitt wrote several novels using the theme of galactic omega clouds (death weapons or art objects, depending on your point of view) that threaten all civilizations.  In his novels the weapons are attracted to straight lines and right angles and ruthlessly attack any they come upon.  Bova’s gamma death wave reminded me of McDevitt’s omega clouds – and reminded me how much I liked McDevitt’s novels.

Survival is a decent read albeit a fast read.  If you have a spare evening give it a shot.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

Retrograde – Group Survival on Mars by Peter Cawdron

January 30, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Retrograde starts with 120 people from all over the world living as a science colony on Mars.  The four national groups live in separate habitats formed out of underground lava tubes and all four group habitats connect to a large hub full of growing plants and animals.  The teams are happy, doing research on Martian conditions, living, joking, playing games, eating and loving when suddenly they learn that over twenty large cities have been destroyed in nuclear attacks.  It’s not clear who is fighting whom, or why, and although indications are the US started it, nothing makes sense.

Plot Synopsis

Liz, the US scientist who narrates the novel, urges the national team leaders to not fight, to cooperate, to share the limited resources, to live and not to die.  Survival is complicated and challenging because the resupply mission apparently missed Mars and is zooming off into space.

Several of the team get suspicious that the whole story doesn’t make any sense.  There is no reason for war on Earth, no reason for the supply ship to go astray, and some see evidence that the supply ship in fact landed quite close by.  Liz goes out to one of the outposts to look for the ship, falls and is badly hurt, almost dies.  She is rescued and brought back for treatment by the Chinese doctor Jianyu who is her lover.

Some of the facility sections lose oxygen and many die, including Jianyu, although Liz survives.  This is one more oddity that makes several team member suspect the culprit is not a person at all, but an AI.

The rest of the novel focuses on how the teams come together to fight off the AI, and with a few snippets about parallel happenings on Earth.  Luckily enough people realized the attacks were fishy that the military and political leaders around the globe did not call in massive retaliation strikes.  In fact, although millions were killed, many survive even around the destroyed cities.

There are parallels to Andy Weir’s Martian, in that people must survive, must use their wits to figure out and overcome challenges that will otherwise kill them.  The difference is Retrograde looks at groups of people, individuals working with a few other individuals, although the challenges are in fact far greater.  (The AI could kill off everyone on Mars and go back to Earth and destroy even more.)

Characters

Retrograde is about people, but it is not a character novel, it’s more of a story about people facing a very bad situation.  It reminds me of some war movies that focus one one person after another, leaving each when they die or go offstage.  Dialogue is OK, but in general the characters are just so-so.  There wasn’t anyone I want to get to know better.

Overall

I mostly enjoyed reading Retrograde.  It is always refreshing to find well-written science fiction that has believable people, although the main plot twist was unbelievable.   The pacing is uneven and to be blunt, I got a little tired of the story.

So many new authors try to write military science fiction, or novels about small traders, smugglers, folks living on the edge,, and so few do it well.  Too often the basic approach is to take a story that could be set on Earth just fine and dump it into outer space and call it science fiction.  Sometimes the only way we can tell it’s outer space and meant to be science fiction is that the character will mention their ship or their trips to other star systems.  Retrograde is real science fiction; Cawdron takes a semi-plausible scenario, and uses real science as the story backdrop.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Near Future Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

Disappointing Novel – Deadly Cargo Jake Mudd Adventures Book 1 by Hal Archer

January 9, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I’m going to do what I hate doing, write a negative review on a book that the author labored to create.  I dislike writing stinky reviews even more than reading the book that spawned the dislike.

Deadly Cargo (Jake Mudd Adventures Book 1) features small-time cargo ship owner, Jake Mudd, and his adventures trying to deliver a million-credit package.  Of course the delivery goes wrong, he meets a girl, he saves the planet and he escapes just ahead of a deadly enemy.  Good authors can make Space ship owners who live on the fringe or the underside of society into enjoyable stories and I hoped to get that with the Jake Mudd book.

The author, Hal Archer, writes such a good newsletter that I bumped Jake up to the top of my overflowing to-read pile.  The novel is also fairly well written, in the sense of good use of language, good sentence structure.  What I didn’t care for in the story were a few too many plot holes, an overall ridiculous plot, and a dearth of characterization.

One plot hole is that Jake needs the million credit chip the villain has, but shoves the villain into a pot of bio goop.  I doubt it would have taken more than a few seconds to pull the now-dead villain out and retrieve the chip, but Jake doesn’t.  He knows an old enemy is coming for him, thus his ostensible reason to skedaddle but I don’t buy it.  Not for someone as desperate for cash as he.

Another hole in the plot and setting is that Archer repeatedly tells us the landscape is barren, as in no vegetation.  None.  Plus the daily storms are strong enough to wipe out almost any plants if there were some.  Yet the planet has large predators.  (This is the same puzzle as with the ice planet of Hoth that just so happened to have large animals.)

The book has some good points.  There is no swearing or foul language and no sex scene.  It is a fast read.  The relationship between Jake and his AI star ship, Sarah, seems interesting and likely explored more in sequels.

Reviewers on Amazon liked the book more than I, with average 4 stars, most complimenting the plot and fast, entertaining readability.  I didn’t like it very much at all and am rating it 2 stars since I managed to finish but didn’t enjoy and do not intend to read any sequels.

2 Stars

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Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 2 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

The Terran Consensus by Scott Washburn: With Friends Like This…

December 9, 2017 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Here’s a dilemma for you:

Some folks that you really don’t like, who manipulated and conned you for years, had a fight in your back yard.  Problem is, the guys they fought are nosing around, suspicious and convinced you are buddies with the first group, since after all, they were camped out in your yard and left their stuff all around your place.  In fact you are pretty sure group 2 believes in shooting first, questions later.  What do you do?

A.  Ally with group 1, the con men, and defend against group 2.
or
B.  Kick out group 1, dump everything they ever gave you – and hope you didn’t miss any of it – plead innocence with group 2 and hope they buy it.  If they don’t believe you, well, say good-bye to human civilization.

Bad choices, eh?  That’s the set up with The Terran Consensus.

Group 1, the Somerans, have been watching and manipulating us for the last 200 years.  In fact they insinuated their technology into ours, their beliefs into our popular entertainment and have even taken humans away to live on their planet.  Now it’s time for them to take a more active role in our governments.  They bring a new ship with several humans they have trained to become leaders in our world, all behind the scenes and in secret.

Their goal is to develop us as allies in their centuries long war with the Brak-Shar and they weren’t fussy how they do it or who they maneuver into power, i.e., Hitler was one of their little projects.  Several times the expedition leader observes that there is no morality or immorality associated with their human involvement since morality is exclusive to one’s own species.   (Not so and I don’t think too many humans would agree with this boundary.  We see morality dealing with animals.)

On the other hand, Group 2, the Brak-Shar, are not so good either.  They assumed the humans in the earth space station were with the Somerans, despite no evidence, and killed as many as they could.  When the Somerans tell us that the Brak-Shar are coming and that they will without a doubt disbelieve we are nothing more than trading partners, we are in deep trouble.

We take our best shot at protecting our planet and people and I’m not going to spoil by telling you what Earth chooses.

Summary

The plot is good, a little more believable and complex than many first contact stories and Washburn uses it to show us the characters.  I especially liked his portrayal of the Someran leader, Keeradoth.  We see him question his own people’s methods and goals and see him become more human over time, more aligned to us.  Keeradoth contemplates packing up and high tailing it for home, leaving Earth to work out what they can with the Brak-Shar.  But he decides that he owes us some help after manipulating us into the predicament.

The writing style is good too, with enjoyable dialogue and a reasonably fast pace.  Part of the ending is a bit over the top, but perfectly fine given the overall story.

I enjoyed The Terran Consensus and found it easy to follow, with interesting characters and conflicts.  Technology and gee-whiz space shenanigans are low key and only there to provide setting, not to detract from people

4 Stars

 

 

Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Science Fiction

Well That Was Fun… We Are Legion (We Are Bob) (Bobiverse Book 1)

September 8, 2017 by Kathy Leave a Comment

We are Legion (We are Bob) (Bobiverse Book 1) is a lot of fun but read the caveats before you buy.

Plot and World Building

Bob sells his software company and signs up to be frozen for eventual resuscitation just before he dies in a traffic accident.  He wakes up about 100 years later, this time as a “replicant”, a personality and mind uploaded into a computer program.  He learns he has zero rights and has the opportunity to become an interstellar probe pilot – or be turned off.  To add challenge, there are 5 other replicants who have the same opportunity.

Bob’s a competitive guy and decides to win.

Bob’s new world is grimmer than ours.  The US no longer exists and is now a theocracy centered in the Pacific Northwest.  Brazil among other countries is also building probes using artificially recreated personalities and the world is in an arms race.  Bob manages to get off the planet and launch towards Epsilon Eridanni just ahead of Brazil’s attack.

Here’s where Bob’s software background gets handy.  Bob is able to weed through his programming and remove several backdoor control points and rebuild himself as autonomous.  He decides to go ahead with the mission anyway.

Bob gets to his target system and explores a bit, encounters the murderous Brazilian probe, fights the Brazilian off.  Bob clones himself and puts his copies – who are also autonomous individuals – into their own spaceships.  Howard and Will return to Earth.  Good thing too, because one of the Brazilian software clones is slinging asteroids – big ones, planet killer types – at Earth.  Over 95% of humanity has died off from the prior wars and now the Brazilian’s asteroid attack will kill everyone left.

Much of the plot after this point turns on how to rescue the remaining people on Earth:  Where to move them to, how to get them there, who first, so on.

Parallel plots center around Bob and the main clone characters.

Characters

Bob is the main character in this novel of course, but he also clones himself and makes Bill and Homer, then many more generations.  Each has slightly different interests but all are quirky, nerdy types, the ones you figure will keep their teen senses of humor forever.

Bob discovers the Deltans, a race of primitive folks just beginning their stone age and is fascinated with the culture.

Will aka Riker (one of too many Star Trek jokes) and Howard  go back to Earth and spend their time helping the folks left, and eventually to evacuate them.

Bill is actually a more interesting character than Bob.  Bill tinkers and explores and develops faster-than-light communication in this first book and later develops other neat whiz-bang things.  Bill also acts as the hub for the Bobiverse as it grows to include about 100 Bobs.

Dennis Taylor does a decent job showing us the different Bob variants although he also does a fair amount of telling.  It seemed like he created so many variants mostly to have a lot of names around; we have 3 or 4 main Bobs in this first book and a few more in each of the sequels that play noticeable roles.

I suspect it’s kind of hard to have a lot of character development when your character is a computer program.  The basic premise is that the program is scanned from Bob’s brain and contains his personality along with generic computer capabilities and this personality can adapt and change.  Still, character development is somewhat thin in this and successive books in the series.

Caveat

As I said in the title of this post, We are Legion (We are Bob) and its sequels are a lot of fun.  The Bobs explore our tiny neighborhood in the galaxy; they meet new civilizations and peoples; they rescue humanity from death.  The book is fast-paced and overall most enjoyable.

However.  The author apparently believes that religious belief is ridiculous and that there are enough Christian nutcases to go create a theocracy.  It reminded me of some of the more fervid nightmares people foamed about during Bush’s presidency. Taylor inserts Trump into the story a bit too.

I don’t know whether the author is an atheist; to me this attitude was just a backdrop for the story.

There is also a lot of gee-whiz going on.  Bob tells us that the basic prerequisites for interstellar work are the 3-D printer and intelligent software.

The 3-D printer is souped up version, able to layer individual atoms to build anything from elaborate computer cores sufficient to hold a Bob clone, to new spacecraft, to bombs.  About the only thing it can’t print is something alive or food.  (I think its problem with food may be more because it would be grossly inefficient rather than technically impossible.)  Now years ago I was a research chemist.  Just because you stick two atoms next to each other, even if aligned just exactly right, Mother Nature is stubborn and you might not get the chemical reaction you want.  I don’t see how a 3-D printer could assemble atoms into plastic, for example.  (Today’s printers today use plastic as raw material.)

Even if you believe the 3-D printer could assemble mining robots, etc., etc., to go build a new spacecraft with computer core, I think the timescale is off.  In the book Bob/Bill/Howard are independent within a few years.   That brings me to the final point, the idea of copying someone into a computer.  Frankly I don’t believe it.  Perhaps it might be possible to load memories into non-brain storage, but I don’t see how copying memories will create a personality, one that is inherently a person, not a program.

If you can ignore the gosh-darn technological wonder doings and don’t take the idiotic anti-Christian backdrop personally then it’s a blast.  Don’t look for outstanding writing or subtle character building; this isn’t literature.  Instead enjoy for what this novel is, entertainment.

5 Stars for entertainment.

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Filed Under: Space and Aliens Tagged With: 5 Stars, Book Review, Science Fiction

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