Saturday, April 06, 2013

Review: The Lost Stars: Tarnished Knight


The Lost Stars: Tarnished Knight
The Lost Stars: Tarnished Knight by Jack Campbell

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



If you liked the Lost Fleet series, and are enjoying the Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier series, then you'll like this book.

It is tough to tell if it is a standalone or the start of a sub-series in the Black Jack Geary universe.

Either way, we get to see a Syndic system [Midway, featured prominently along with the Enigma races in early books] after the fall of the Syndics.

2 CEO's make a go of creating an independent system of Midway. Along the way they must face and takedown the Syndic secret service [officially known as ISS, but popularly as Snakes], have enough trust in the other to not knife them in the back, and deal with gate-connected systems as they go through upheaval as well.

I thoroughly enjoyed this. There was only 1 or 2 instances of Mr Campbell's love of exposition on space fighting and whatnot. Made for a refreshing change. The story did wrap up ok, but it was completely open for future novels if he so desired.

I, for one, would like to see some more of this Universe without Black Jack. Not because I dislike him, but because writing about a duo seems to bring out a different side of Mr. Campbell's writing.



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Friday, April 05, 2013

Review: Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines


Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines by David Hagberg

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



As others have written, this is pretty much a word for action of the movie.

This was a letdown, even after having seen the movie, because I've been reading some of the other Terminator books. This was stilted cardboard.

The only cool thing was the idea of a Terminator coming back and knocking off Connor's support group before they could grow up. Cut the roots one at a time if you can't cut the tree down, in other words.



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Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Review: Bridge of Birds: A Novel of an Ancient China That Never Was


Bridge of Birds: A Novel of an Ancient China That Never Was
Bridge of Birds: A Novel of an Ancient China That Never Was by Barry Hughart

My rating: 5 of 5 stars



A chinese fairytale. That made me laugh my butt off.

Number 10 Ox, the tenth son of a peasant, teams up with a physician, Master Li, who has one character flaw. They work together to save the children of Ox's village, who have fallen ill of a mysterious disease.

Along the way, they fight monsters, mother-in-laws, misers, monks and an immortal warlord. They fly in a basket with palm-frond blades, they kill a coward's daughter [with his blessing and help], they enjoy multiple hoards of treasures and in the end, they help restore a goddess to heaven.

This was engaging, light hearted, funny, just enough dark macabre humor to keep me tickled and serious enough so I didn't feel like I was drowning in cotton candy.



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Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Review: The Recruit


The Recruit
The Recruit by Robert Muchamore

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



When I first saw this book, and its little blurb, I was thinking it was something like Spriggan, with a typical anime'esque child killers.

Instead, I got a Y/A novel about spoiled pre-teens and teens who are in the Intelligence line of work. And who practically whore around.

Sorry, 12 year olds who make out for hours on end in a bedroom, alone, is not appropriate subject matter.

The idea, of spy kids, is cool. Just didn't care for the execution.



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Monday, April 01, 2013

Review: Kris Longknife


Kris Longknife
Kris Longknife by Mike Shepherd

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Kris is embassied to another planet, and ends up saving it from a Peterwald invasion.

I am a bit tired of Shepherd emphasizing how tall, slim hipped, flat butted and flat chested Kris is. It is just annoying to be honest.

Other than that, this was a good rousing, blood soaked tale of action and adventure.



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Sunday, March 31, 2013

Review: Olympus Union: The Past Repeated


Olympus Union: The Past Repeated
Olympus Union: The Past Repeated by Gary Bloom

My rating: 1 of 5 stars



DISCLAIMER #1: The author asked me to review this and sent me a free epub version.

DISCLAIMER #2: I asked the author to make sure this was a proofread/edited copy so as not to waste my time. Therefore, I am not holding any punches.

This was a short novel, a bit over 100 pages on my Nook.

The reason I put this on my "Abandoned" shelf and gave it one star was because by the time I was halfway through I had come across several instances of:
1) TO/TOO was misused
2) words were misused [Root instead of Route]
3) words were left out of sentences [very obvious when a sentence NEEDS a pronoun, and it isn't there]
4) extremely awkward sentence structures that left me scratching my head as to what the author meant to convey

From a literary standpoint [and while SFF might not be what the so called Literati's read, it still has to follow the rules], this was SO 'amost good'.
I liked the basis of a one world gov't divided up into 10 sections [Revelations anyone?], but the characters. Caricatures, ideas of characters, extremely well painted cardboard cutouts. But not real characters.

There are just to [or is that too?] many instances of a character acting out of character [at least from the tiny bit I knew of them]:

1) you have this lady who is supposed to be the "Peace Keeper" of the whole shebang, ie, the top Warlord.Someone who is put in a position like that is not some dewey eyed idealist. They don't have to be some Satan worshipping, baby eating Nazi, but still, a corrupt set of officials isn't going to appoint a Paragon of Virtue to that position. So why does this Lady peacekeeper come across as a do-gooder?

2) the Aries Elite character. I was under the impression that the Aries were gene-modded to be supermen without the brains or emotions. But Captain Courageous is the polar opposite of his boss, an Aries who is a fat slob sitting behind a desk. Which is correct? Superman with a brain or fat corrupt Blobbo? It can't be both, they're GENE-MODDED!, ie, it is hardwired into them.

3) Kro, the mysterious guy dressed in black. He should have been cool. Space ninja. But we get someone who is completely schizo. He can avoid the OU gov't, the rebellion AND move around the solar system as he pleases, but he's worried about having enough patience to deal with one lousy lowlife spaceship captain? For someone to BE that good, they have to have the internal & external skills already worked out. Or they would have been caught/dealt with before we get to the story.


When I started this book, I felt like it could be good; run of the mill, but enjoyable.
But obvious lack of proofing/editing and unskilled character writing killed this for me.

If you read this review, you might feel like I completely savaged Mr. Bloom. And you would be correct. I did. I didn't pick this book up on my own. I was ASKED to review it.

If you want to read it anyway, and you love it, that is great! I really hope you read the rest in his series if you do. Any comments from Mr. Bloom I will do my best to answer honestly.

But just to give fair warning, inflammatory comments will simply be deleted. I don't have the patience to deal with them. .



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Friday, March 29, 2013

Review: Point Of Impact


Point Of Impact
Point Of Impact by Stephen Hunter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I enjoyed the movie, Shooter, enough to check the book it was based on.

Thoroughly enjoyable. A bit of gun porn, with numbers and X's and this's and that's thrown about that meant absolutely nothing to me, but it didn't really detract from the story.

Shooting, government conspiracies, etc, etc.

It wrapped up nicely and Bob Lee gets to walk off into the sunset.

And then I see that it is a whole series. He's a middle age man from Vietnam. How many adventures can he have? I guess I'll be finding out.



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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Review: Goblin Quest


Goblin Quest
Goblin Quest by Jim C. Hines

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This was a lot of fun to read.

Take your typical "hero on a quest to kill a dragon, blah, blah, blah" and completely turn it on its head.

We follow Jig, a runt of a goblin, who is nearsighted. He just wants to have enough to eat each day and to not be bullied about by the bigger goblins.

Unfortunately, for Jig, he is thrust into the company of aforementioned adventurers. Who are vile scumbags who simply want to use Jig and then kill him.

Jig ends up being the hero, and the leader of his people.

Where [b:Libriomancer|12844699|Libriomancer (Magic Ex Libris, #1)|Jim C. Hines|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1318277038s/12844699.jpg|17995680] felt like a Dresden clone, this was original. It toed the line between humor, dark humor and sadness, as we see how other races are treated by humankind.

We are also introduced to the the firespider who is part of Libriomancer.

Overall, I'm definitely looking forward to the rest of the trilogy.



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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Review: Caribbean Kill


Caribbean Kill
Caribbean Kill by Don Pendleton

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This didn't get the "Ultra-violent" tag.

Overall, this seemed pretty lame. A 24hr quickie.



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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Review: Gunslinger Girl Omnibus 5


Gunslinger Girl Omnibus 5
Gunslinger Girl Omnibus 5 by Yu Aida

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



We get a TON of backstory for some of the Handler's here.

And the overall plot tightens up into an actual plot, instead of just short stories about the girls. And the first gens are starting to wear out, which changes the dynamics of how the Agency operates.

So lots of info, drama, guns and death.



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