An alien race had come to make Earth theirs. The war has raged for five centuries. It was nearly the end of the world.
Growing up in this shattered environment isn't easy for anyone. Some, like Jax, grew up in an elite military academy, training for battle. Others, like Naomi, grew up nomadic roaming the wilds of a ruined Earth, it means a daily fight for survival.
When paths cross Jax and Naomi, along with other fighters and survivors must find a way to turn back the invasion. Otherwise their home will finally be completely destroyed.
Ninth City Burning does the thing that so many books do these days that I hate. It hops back and forth from different POV. Starting out with different characters in different cities who all eventually converge.
Frankly I would have like to have seen more of Naomi's story. I was annoyed that the tale around her and her tribe converged so quickly with the high-tech society. SO I guess I would have lieked a post apocalyptic survival story instead of a Sci-fi tale.
The overall story was interesting. How the world handled a multi-year inter-dimensional war. The underlying theme of "OMG YOU'RE TOO YOUNG FOR WAR, but we're gonna make you do it anyway" got to be really annoying after a while. Especially since this is a thick 500+ page read.
I could see Ninth City Burning making a big-budget big screen movie one day, maybe, but it didn't really make me want to change my favorite reading genre to Sci-fi.
I did get this book for free from blogging for books, but all thoughts and opinions are mine.
Showing posts with label science fiction novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science fiction novel. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
Friday, January 20, 2017
Dark Energy by Robison Wells
Warning: This review may contain MILD spoilers for the novel Dark Matter.
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A spaceship has crashed in the Midwest. It fell first on Iowa, then skidded tow hundred and fifty miles north into Minnesota. Thousands of human lives were ended. Now the world is waiting for whatever is in the ship to come out.
This is why Alice had to move from Miami, Florida. Her dad is the director of special projects for NASA. He has to go to the site of the crash and Alice has to go to The Minnetonka School for the Gifted and Talented.
While she's trying to decide whether she falls into the Gifted or Talented portion of the school, the crash landed visitors finally make an appearance, and suddenly everything changes.
They call themselves the Guides, and they look very Human.
While the leader of the thousands housed inside the giant spaceship are talking with Government leaders, two of the younger aliens also end up at the Minnetonka School for the Gifted and Talented.
One of them becomes first roommates, then friends, with the young alien woman.
Then things get even stranger....
This novel had a couple of twists I didn't expect, and a couple of plot points that you could see coming from a mile away. And some things that made you roll your eyes because they were a little TOO good to be true, even in a fictional novel.
I would recommend this one to anyone who enjoys YA Earthbound Sci-Fi.
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Dark Energy is available on Amazon in Kindle, Hardback and Paperback.
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A spaceship has crashed in the Midwest. It fell first on Iowa, then skidded tow hundred and fifty miles north into Minnesota. Thousands of human lives were ended. Now the world is waiting for whatever is in the ship to come out.
This is why Alice had to move from Miami, Florida. Her dad is the director of special projects for NASA. He has to go to the site of the crash and Alice has to go to The Minnetonka School for the Gifted and Talented.
While she's trying to decide whether she falls into the Gifted or Talented portion of the school, the crash landed visitors finally make an appearance, and suddenly everything changes.
They call themselves the Guides, and they look very Human.
While the leader of the thousands housed inside the giant spaceship are talking with Government leaders, two of the younger aliens also end up at the Minnetonka School for the Gifted and Talented.
One of them becomes first roommates, then friends, with the young alien woman.
Then things get even stranger....
This novel had a couple of twists I didn't expect, and a couple of plot points that you could see coming from a mile away. And some things that made you roll your eyes because they were a little TOO good to be true, even in a fictional novel.
I would recommend this one to anyone who enjoys YA Earthbound Sci-Fi.
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Dark Energy is available on Amazon in Kindle, Hardback and Paperback.
Saturday, July 18, 2015
The Book of Strange New Things - a Review
Similarly when I read a Christian themed novel I don't want God shoved down my throat every other sentence. I know plenty of faith filled people in the world, and most of them do decided whether to go to the bathroom or not without asking God if its okay first.
When I picked The Book of Strange New Things off of Blogging For Books I realized it was a twofer. It was a Christian Science Fiction Novel, and realized that chances were good that it would not meet both of my criteria.
The Book of Strange New Things follows a pastor named Peter, who decides to leave behind his wife, Bea, and his cat Joshua to work as a missionary.
Instead of traveling to a different country or Continent, Peter is traveling to another PLANET.
A mega-corporation known as USIC (if its known at all) found him perfect for the mission. They needed a preacher because the native population of the planet demanded one.
Once he is on the planet, farther away from home than he ever thought possible he finds out he has the most easy missionary job ever. The population is STARVING for the Word of God. They call the Bible their "Book of Strange New Things." Even the ones who are not converted don't give him a hard time.
Then he begins to get news from Bea about a world which is becoming more and more devastated. He feels apart and disconnected from the tragedies of Earth, and eventually finds a gulf of more than dimensional space growing between him and his beloved Bea.
It was a good novel. Emotional in parts, but not very thrilling. The more I read the more I kept expecting the natives to be different than they seemed to be.
The back of the novel cover talks about a "population struggling with a dangerous illness" and I kept waiting for that to show up too.
As far as meeting my criteria...Peter is a layperson not a scientist. That makes him different than the rest of the population on the planet. While the characters in the background sometimes talk of techinical things its only mentioned in the passing through Peters POV.
Then there was the Christian part. Of course, when the bulk of the book is about a Christian Missionary bringing the Gospel to aliens on another planet, you expect there will be more God-talk than in a novel about (for example) a religious private detective. I appreciate that the preaching was left mostly to the scenes with the natives and not so much Peter trying to convert the other humans in the settlement.
Parts of the book were written using the "letters" of the natives as Peter tries to learn the language. Towards the very end of the book he gives them a speech using ONLY their own language. That was a bit annoying to me. I have no idea what he said to his flock in that scene, and it was never translated for the reader.
And Peter himself seemed a little more self-centered than I would imagine a Missionary to be. He didn't try very hard to interact with the humans, even the ones who clearly needed him. And in his letters to Bea he comes across as only wanting to talk about himself, but not even really wanted to do that. Her missives to him are long and full of info. His letters to her are mostly just a few lines long and usually telling her to pray or turn to God (when she clearly wanted support from her husband no matter how far away he was.)
More interesting are the letters that Peter gets from Bea. Normally I hate when a book switches POV from one character to another, but I wanted to see more of what was going on on Earth. We got tidbits from Bea, but not enough.
I have a feeling that if I had seen more of the book from Bea's POV on earth I might have been more likely to give it a full 5 stars.
As it was I give this novel 4 out of 5 stars. It could have been more thrilling, but it never promised to be a Thriller. And it made me read for 3 hours straight near the end because I HAD to know how it ended.
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