Born with a scarlet mote in her left eye, Phédre nó Delaunay is sold into indentured servitude as a child. When her bond is purchased by an enigmatic nobleman, she is trained in history, theology, politics, foreign languages, the arts of pleasure. And above all, the ability to observe, remember, and analyze. Exquisite courtesan, talented spy… and unlikely heroine. But when Phédre stumbles upon a plot that threatens her homeland, Terre d’Ange, she has no choice.
Description/Book Blurb: Forty-one years ago, the renowned physicist Dr. Christopher Robin vanished. Before his disappearance, his fringe science theories about the existence of endless alternate universes had earned him both admirers and enemies.
Now his widow has died and Alex Benedict has been asked to handle the auction of the physicist’s artifacts—leading the public to once again speculate on the mystery surrounding Robin’s disappearance. Did he finally find the door between parallel universes that he had long sought?
Intrigued, Benedict and Chase Kolpath embark on their own investigation as they follow the missing man’s trail into the unknown to uncover the truth—a truth people are willing to kill to protect…
Review 5 of 5 Stars
Firebird was a really good mystery/thriller science fiction time travel story. This is a smart story that doesn’t depend on jaunting through time to give you a great time travel story. In fact, aside from one poor soul who accidentally ends up there, the focus of the story is not about the actual experience of traveling through time but how to save those who are stuck traveling in time and the science of how those people became stuck in time. Those who read my reviews know I have a soft spot for time travel pieces, but I believe this one is smart enough and slick enough to interest regular science fiction readers as well and perhaps even those who don’t generally enjoy time travel stories. This is a story about the science of how the universe is made up and some of the possibilities that might be encountered by a society that travels freely through the stars. I don’t know if these things are possible or will be in the future, but it certainly is interesting to think and dream about such interesting and frightening possibilities.
It’s probably pretty obvious at this point that I’m on a Jack McDevitt kick as I just discovered his books recently and have been enjoying the chance to discover a new writer’s voice, characters and stories. I really enjoyed this book and have to say that of the books I’ve read from Jack McDevitt that my favorites are fast becoming the Alex Benedict books. For an antiquarian this character sure finds himself at the middle of a lot of things, but that’s where a good sense of curiosity takes you.
When physicist Michael Shelborne mysteriously vanishes, his son Shel discovers that he had constructed a time travel device. Following his father’s trail through history-from the enlightenment of Renaissance Italy through the American Wild West to the civil-right upheavals of the 20th century-Shel makes a devastating discovery that sends him feeling back through the ages, and changes his life forever.
Review: 4 of 5 Stars
Some of this is going to sound contradictory since I have to say I waffled between 3 and 4 stars, but I’ll explain that along the way.
Personally, I really enjoyed this book. It was a great trip through history. A veritable what-if traveling list for time travel adventurers. I fully admit that I have a weakness for both time travel stories and history. Thus my first dilemma when rating this book as I would be the first in line if they were offering time travel cruises and I feel it may bias my views on this type of story.
The actual shell story wasn’t very important to my overall enjoyment of the book and it really wasn’t all that memorable for me aside from a few pieces. This was my second consideration and what almost made me give it a 3. However, what I found interesting was the time spent in the past, the discussions about who to go visit and why, and seeing historic people at historic events which was well done and entertaining. Mostly what I found appealing about this particular book was the opportunity for just a moment to transport yourself to those far away times and places to catch a glimpse of that time if even just through a fictional account. That pretty much sums up why I love time travel stories. I would have loved to have gone along on the adventure. For that moment of daydreaming I’m willing to overlook a lot as I don’t expect that these gentlemen will show up on my front porch with a spare device and an invitation for me to come along.
It’s nice when they try to explain how you get there and whatever the paradox theory is for a particular book. In this one it’s the cardiac effect, which basically means if you mess up the timeline in some way that you aren’t supposed to that you’ll have a heart attack and die. There’s one event of sorts, some later discussion about it, and then it’s brought back up a few times in the story. Overall though not much time is spent worrying about it by the characters so as a reader I didn’t either. They kind of say that something could be a problem and then go off on their adventures despite it. As a reader I followed suit and was swept away without much worry for the cardiac effect.
So I settled on a 4 because I love traveling through the ages. If you also enjoy visiting long ago people and places in this manner and don’t care to spend too much time on how the time travel actually works then I think you’ll enjoy this story vacation as much as I did. If you’re looking for something with hard scientific data to get you down the time tunnel you might want to look elsewhere. It was highly readable and I breezed right through it feeling refreshed from the adventure.
It turned up in a North Dakota wheat field: a triangle, like a shark’s fin, sticking up from the black loam. Tom Lasker did what any farmer would have done. He dug it up. And discovered a boat, made of a fiberglass-like material with an utterly impossible atomic number. What it was doing buried under a dozen feet of prairie soil two thousand miles from any ocean, no one knew. True, Tom Lasker’s wheat field had once been on the shoreline of a great inland sea, but that was a long time ago — ten thousand years ago.
Review 4 of 5 Stars
I feel I have to give this book at least 4 stars even though it was a little slow for my taste at times. I say this because it prompted me to head back to the book store the following week to see what else Mr. McDevitt had written as I liked the overall flavor of the storytelling. Any book that leads you to buy another just to see what the author’s work is about has done it’s job and at least deserves 4 stars.
In this story what initially begins as a strange discovery turns into an all out archaeological project that results in an interesting form of access to other places. The story moved a bit slow for me at times and I wanted him to get on with it, but I really enjoyed the flavor of the characters and the tale being told. Perhaps part of my problem was the lack of patience as I waited for the story to unfold. I think perhaps I wouldn’t have been good at the dig site in this story and would have been the one beating my head against the structure in frustration while the others scientifically and methodically continued.
As stated above this book led me to pick up some more of Mr. McDevitt’s books and I have very much enjoyed several of them. McDevitt is a writer that makes you think about things along the way and I appreciate that in a story. This story was pretty well thought out for the most part. It had a few flaws, but nothing big enough to really mention. Additionally, I liked the characters though sometimes they seemed a bit reckless as they barreled ahead at unexpected times. So in the end it wasn’t a great book, but it was a good enough story that I enjoyed the adventure and hope to travel on others with this author.
WOOL introduced the silo and its inhabitants.
SHIFT told the story of their making.
DUST will chronicle their undoing.
Welcome to the underground.
Review: 4 of 5 Stars
I have really enjoyed the Wool series and I have now read Dust twice. I originally read it fresh off the pre-order, but then life got in the way and I didn’t review it right away. So I thought it would only be fair to re-read a few passages or so to get back the feel of it, which ended up with me re-reading the entire book. I did enjoy the book and I still think Juliette is a great character though she does get incredibly lucky pretty regularly considering the odds she is up against, etc. I’m not saying nothing bad ever happens to her. Lots of bad things happen to Juliette. In fact, sometimes it seems that there is someone following her around with a bag of ‘bad things about to happen’. Nevertheless, in the overall scheme of things she comes out of it pretty well.
There didn’t seem to be as much tension to this story and I wasn’t as thoroughly engaged even the first time around. It was still a good story, but it just didn’t grip me the way the original story did when I read it in the omnibus. I think part of that is due to this being kind of a wrap-up of the story. An example might be that I love a good mystery thriller; however, when everything has been revealed sometimes I feel a little let down not because it wasn’t a good story, but because the adventure and mystery are over. It’s kind of like that slump after an adrenaline high. I got the same feeling at the end of the book Perfume by Patrick Suskind. The tension held in the dark, drab, conspiracy controlled world of the silo is hard to keep alive when you move on. Since I do not have any suggestions on how to make the story itself better or end it differently, I definitely see the predicament of trying to wrap it all up. I don’t know if there was a better way to end it or if a different way would have been better. This ending seems to be what might be the best we could hope for were we stuck in one of these silos and trying to save the lives of our friends and families.
So in the end Dust is 4 out of 5 stars for me. I really liked it and enjoyed the read, but it wasn’t quite as powerful for me as the original. Just because you don’t love the final book of a series as much as you did the previous ones does not mean it isn’t a good book or series. It’s just that some portions of the story were more powerful than others or at least that’s my opinion. Overall, it was a good read both times. I am very excited to see what Ridley Scott does with the movie version as he is one of my favorite directors and I feel he might bring the correct degree of ‘dark’ to the movie. Keeping my fingers crossed and waiting to see what happens.
Little Green Men is a tribute to the works of Philip K. Dick, hailing back to classic science fiction stories of the 1950s.
The crew of the Dei Gratia set down on a frozen planet and are attacked by little green men. Chief Science Officer David Michaels struggles with the impossible situation unfolding around him as the crew are murdered one by one. With the engines offline and power fading, he races against time to understand this mysterious threat and escape the planet alive.
5 of 5 Stars
Little Green Men by Peter Cawdron was a great ride. I enjoyed it very much and sped right through it, never finding myself bored or distracted by outside factors. The crew of the Dei Gratia have a unique experience during their exploration of a possible mining site. They must conquer themselves and work together to understand the mystery that is presented to them in the hope of getting away alive.
This was a good first contact story of the old style variety. The writing was excellent as was the storytelling. I felt like I was there and that’s what I’m looking for from a story. Any time you find yourself physically cringing in your chair as the characters go to peek around a corner there is no doubt that the author has done their job. One of the things I really enjoy about Peter Cawdron’s stories is that he seems like the kind of person who sits around in the evening fully exploring the what-if scenarios before him, waiting patiently until he finds just the scenario he is seeking. This generally leads to some kind of interesting and intelligent twist away from what you were expecting as a reader. I like to be surprised so this is a very appealing quality for me in fiction. All in all it was a fun read and I really enjoyed it. I hope you will too. Once again, Peter Cawdron has given us a tale with something to think about when we head to the stars.
I have to apologize as after my vacation I came home to start a new job. Rather than completely giving up my old job, until I could see how things were going, I decided to work both jobs. This ended up with me working about 70 hours a week which left little time for sleeping and no time for blogging. However, I just finished my two weeks notice with the part-time job and the reviews should start rolling out again this weekend.
It’s not that I haven’t been reading during my absence from the blog. I just did not have the time to devote to writing the reviews. So there will be reviews coming for Dust by Hugh Howey, Little Green Men by Peter Cawdron, two Jack McDevitt books and a host of independent books that I’ve read and still have the reviews in handwritten notes where I jotted down them down in a composition book on my lunch breaks.
I have also received a number of requests for reviews that I will start answering this week though I will have to clear out the backlog of books I promised to review before my forced break so I can start scheduling new ones. Anyway, thanks to those faithful few who follow this blog and my apologies for being absent from it for so long.
I wrote this poem what seems like a million years ago, but as I follow the news here in the U.S. it seems particularly relevant and timely despite how sad that makes me so I decided to share it here on my blog.
America
by TJ Hapney
Flags of dishonesty flap in the breeze.
America is dying!
This once great lady is drowning,
Politics is big business,
And no one knows how to stop the flood.
Basic freedoms are lost at every turn,
And hate fills the hearts of men.
America is dying!
Our forefathers would not have lived
In this country today;
Taxation and oppression,
Would drive them to revolution.
Where do we go from here?
Can anyone curb the tide?
America is dying!
Tomorrow you may wake,
To find the hand of dynamic ineffectualism
Knocking at your door.
Do not whine and cry,
When the freedom you once had is gone.
Not, if you have sat there,
Accepting each new constraint,
Never uttering a word.
America is dying!
Summer, what a wonderful time for a vacation. I have several review requests that I will be reading while on vacation and posting and I received an updated version of Bomber Boy from the author and will be re-reading that as well. Please note that requests received while I am on vacation will be put off until September unless it just knocks my socks off. Those that have already been received will get read/reviewed while I am on vacation. Hope everyone has a great summer.
Description: Rolmar is a heartless, misanthropic demon who serves as one of the three overlords of Pentar, a planet in the Amenis dimension. When Rolmar’s brethren bestow upon him the illustrious task of destroying Earth, his growing curiosity of humans adds a momentary pause to his original plan. Still intent on annihilating Earth, Rolmar extends his stay in order to discover what makes humanity unique.
However, when Adam, a quirky college student, crosses paths with the all-powerful demon, one fateful night will change his life forever. Haunted by nightmares of his mind-blowing encounter, Adam can’t return to his normal life. His only path to solace is attempting to convince the demon that Earth is worth saving. With the fate of the world on their shoulders, will Adam and his friends be able to convince Rolmar that they and all of mankind should be spared?
Review 4 of 5 Stars
I received a request from the author to read this story and I have to say that The Demon Rolmar by A.V. Griffin was such a fun read. It was not at all what I expected from the description when I sat down to read it.
Now you may be thinking that me saying that means the description doesn’t really give a good idea of the story and yet it does. It does not, however, prepare you for a story that doesn’t take itself too seriously and is great fun to read. It was clever, fun, well executed and I really enjoyed watching the demon’s character progress through the story. The writing was tight and I didn’t notice any of the copy editing errors you see in a lot of independent work.
I liked the care taken to show us the demon’s home world Pentar as well as some of the nifty tricks employed by the Pentarians and took it into the realm of science fiction rather than just a fantasy story. I don’t want to give away too much, because some of what was so enjoyable are the unexpected mischievous things and I really don’t want to spoil those. I will say it made me chuckle on more than one occasion.
This isn’t a very long story (I read it in an evening), but the characters were vivid, it was a good story overall and I really liked it. I think the end wrapped up a little too neatly, but I wasn’t necessarily disappointed in the ending either. So there you have it. If you enjoy a little science fiction with your fantasy and want a chance to chuckle a few times along the way this might be just the story for you.




