Showing posts with label Sci-Fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sci-Fi. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 March 2019

Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear: Blog Tour Review

Series: White Space, Book One
Publisher: Gollancz
Format: Paperback
Published: 7thMarch 2019
Number of Pages: 512
Book: For Review*
Genre: Sci-Fi, Space Opera, Action-Adventure, Mystery, Adult
Recommended Age: 15+
Contains: Violence, Death, Swearing, Alcohol and Drug References
Author’s Site: Elizabeth Bear 

Blurb From Goodreads:
Haimey Dz thinks she knows what she wants.
She thinks she knows who she is.
She is wrong.
A routine salvage mission uncovers evidence of a terrible crime and relics of powerful ancient technology. Haimey and her small crew run afoul of pirates at the outer limits of the Milky Way, and find themselves on the run and in possession of universe-changing information.
When authorities prove corrupt, Haimey realizes that she is the only one who can protect her galaxy-spanning civilization from the implications of this ancient technology—and the revolutionaries who want to use it for terror and war. Her quest will take her careening from the event horizon of the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s core to the infinite, empty spaces at its edge.
To save everything that matters, she will need to uncover the secrets of ancient intelligences lost to time—and her own lost secrets, which she will wish had remained hidden from her forever. 




Review:
Haimey Dz is a salvager and engineer – together with her partner Connla and their shipmind Singer, she travels through space to locate old ships that have been abandoned and lost.
It’s during one such mission that she encounters the mutilated body of one the largest sentient beings to exist between worlds and an ancient ship with long forgotten technology...
Despite the obvious evidence of a crime, Haimey investigates the ship.  And there she discovers technology beyond belief – technology with the power to change the universe.
And the power to ruin her life.
Because now she’s on the run – from both the government and pirates – anything to keep this technology from falling into the wrong hands.
Such as the beautiful pirate Zanya Farweather, who holds secrets from Haimey’s past and threatens to crash through all her defences…
I’ve been reading more sci-fi lately – space operas are really beginning to grow on me after reading a few of Alastair Reynolds’s books.  So when I was offered the chance to read Ancestral Night, I of course agreed – especially when I was told my review would be part of the blog tour!  And so when my bookish package came through my letter box, I instantly got stuck in.  To begin with, I felt totally in over my head – as I always do with sci-fis, especially if I dip into a space opera after reading a bunch of fantasy.  But I soon realised not only is Bear brilliant at making heavy scientific facts seem fairly easy to understand, she’s also brilliant at weaving humour into the story.  I soon got to grip with all the terms and fell totally in love with the world building.  I was totally hooked and literally speed read the book to find out what happened!  
Plus oh my gosh, I’ve never read a truly feminist, girl-power space opera before.  This is literally everything I’ve been searching for in my life.  I am in love.  I did not know how badly I needed this book until I had this book in my hands. Because not only is Haimey a brilliant heroine – she’s also a believable one, capable and witty, brilliantly female and unapologetically gay.  Yes, if you haven’t gathered, I really loved Haimey.  I just loved that she wasn’t perfect or flawless or amazing at everything.  She made mistakes, she failed, she picked herself back up again and tried again.  Plus I just loved her wit and snark and stubbornness.  And I also loved how we slowly got to know more and more about her.
The rest of the cast was great – especially her crew!  I loved the dynamics between Haimey, Connla and Singer.  They were totally like family – bickering and bantering: it was perfect!  I also want to shout out Cheeirilaq for being totally unique and weirdly adorable.  And the cats for being just everything: they were everything, you guys.  Everything.
But yes, there was a lot of world building – mainly cause there were loads of worlds and ships and futuristic stuffs to explore.  I’m awful at science (I haven’t done it for years, in my defence) but I found everything really easy to understand – or, well, simple enough that I didn’t feel totally confused.  I think it really helped that the heavy science-y things were interspersed with jokes and drama and excitement and twists and turns a-plenty.  Basically, Bear nailed it.
Also I continue to be intrigued by the concept of ‘rightminding’ – basically manipulating your brain chemistry to affect your mood.  I don’t know if this is something that happens a lot in sci-fis (I’m still fairly new to this genre) but it was just something I found really interesting! 
I believe this is the first in a series – and I really hope it is.  I enjoyed this so much and I need more female-powered space operas in my life.  Please.  And guys, if you’re looking for a non-stop adventure through space, pick up Ancestral Night.  It’s really one of the most fun sci-fis I’ve read for ages and I can’t recommend it enough!


Star Rating:
4 Out Of 5 Stars



Read this book if you liked:
The Illuminae Files by Jay Kristoff and Aimee Kaufman
Prefect Dreyfus Emergency by Alastair Reynolds
Skyward by Brandon Sanderson

Happy Reading
Megan
*This book was received from Gollancz in exchange for an honest review

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Previous Stop On The Blog Tour: Cover 2 Cover
Next Stop On The Blog Tour: Sci-Fi Bulletin, Rambling Mads

Friday, 10 June 2011

Candor by Pam Bachorz

Publisher: Egmont Books
Format: Paperback
Published: 2nd August 2010
Number of Pages: 304
Book: Borrowed From The Library
Genre: Dystopia, Psychological Thriller, Sci-Fi, Speculative Fiction, Adventure, YA
Recommended Age: 12+
Contains: Nothing Really Unsuitable
No Alcohol, Drug References

My name is Oscar and I am the perfect teenager. My girlfriend is the hottest girl in school. I get straight As. I am class president. But there is a terrible reason I am so perfect: the Messages. Oscar Banks lives in the pristine town of Candor. Son of the mayor, he is good-looking, smart and popular. And he knows something he's not supposed to - he knows about the brainwashing Messages embedded in the music that plays all over the town. But Oscar has found a way to burn counter-Messages that keep him real. Up to now, it's all worked perfectly. There's just one problem: Nia Silva, the newest Candor arrival. What will Oscar risk to keep the Nia he loves rather than watch her become a Candor automaton? Deeply chilling, "Candor" is a psychological thriller that will haunt readers with its vision of a world controlled by something worse than Big Brother.
Review:
I picked up Candor, meaning to just read a chapter or two: it was about one in the morning, and I was tired.  The problem: I simply could not put it down!  It was almost as if the messages were inside my own head, saying, ‘Don’t stop.  Keep reading.  Great readers never stop.’  Candor was just so addictive.  I was up until three, and finished the book in just a matter of sittings.
Candor, the town, was really creepy.  It’s the place where rich parents take their problem children to become ‘fixed’.  What the children aren’t told is that the music that plays all around town contains hidden messages that mould them into perfect little sons or daughters.  All day long, all around ‘respectful space in every place’, ‘always strive to make your parents proud’, ‘studying is your top priority’, ‘the great are never late’.  Without their knowledge, in a week or two, they have lost all their free will.  It’s inevitable, “Nobody escapes the messages”.  Oscar’s different.  And not just because he’s the founder’s son.  He’s different because he knows.  He knows about the messages – he can even hear them in his head, rather than them being sent straight to his subconscious.  And, he can fight them, he can make his own.  He gets kids out.  It’s risky, yes, but he’s always careful.  He never gets caught. 
Until Nia skateboards into his life with spray-paint in her hand.  Suddenly, his world’s different, and instead of wanting to get her out, he wants to keep her the same.  But just how far will Oscar go to keep the Nia he knows and loves?
Oscar was a great male lead, probably because he wasn’t perfect.  I liked that he fought back and that he found a way to make his brain belong to him.  Yes, he was reckless and occasionally a jerk, but when he spoke of everything he’d lost in his life, and everything his own father had done to him, it killed me a little inside.  Oscar was just one of those characters I genuinely came to care for.
Nia was brilliant too: one of those classic literary rich-girls-lashing-out.  She did literally everything imaginable that her parents didn’t want her to do.  But underneath, she was a sweet girl, with a great sense of humour and I came to really like her too.
Candor was one of those books that gripped me from the word go, and had me smiling, laughing, in shock and screaming at it.  I struggled to put it down.  I’m crossing all my fingers, hoping for a sequel, because I did not like how it ended.  Hence the screaming.
Overall, a story with amazing characters and a beautiful lovestory, with a chilling psychological thriller hidden underneath.  Big Brother truly has nothing on Candor.

Star Rating:
4½ Out of 5



Read this book if you liked:
Chaos Walking by Patrick Ness
Gone by Michael Grant


Challenges It's Taking Part In:
Happy Reading
Megan

Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Beyond the Darkness by Leonard D. Hilley II

If you want to buy either Predators of Darkness: Aftermath or Beyond the Darkness go to: eBooks For Pleasure

Series: The Darkness, Book Two
Publisher: Outskirts Press
Format: eBook
Published: Paperback: 22nd July 2008
eBook:
Number of Pages: 280
Book: For Review From Author*
Genre: Sci-Fi, Thriller, Action, Adventure, YA, YA-Adult Crossover
Recommended Age: 12+
Contains: Lots of Violence, Mild Law Breaking, Swearing
No Alcohol, Drug References

PLEASE DON’T READ THIS IF YOU’RE PLANNING ON READING PREDATORS OF DARKNESS: AFTERMATH!

Synopsis From Goodreads:
“Leonard Hilley II's first novel, Predators of Darkness, shows us a nightmarish world of gruesome genetically-engineered monsters preying on humans, corporations more powerful - and more dangerous- than governments, and a web of lies and cover-ups that all sound remarkably like they could have been drawn from today's headlines. Fact or fiction? Read this gripping novel and find out."
- John Kachuba, Author of Ghosthunters: On the Trail of Mediums, Dowsers, Spirit Seekers and Other Investigators of America's Paranormal World
Three years after Daniel and the other survivors escaped the terrorizing, blood-thirsty shifters in Pittsburgh, his friends have moved forward with their lives, but Daniel cannot. He believes the conspiracies within TransGenCorp have not ended and more shifters exist.
Then Daniel receives a phone call from Lucas that bolsters his paranoia.
Lucas is being charged with murders he insists his clone committed.
Daniel soon discovers darker atrocities are emerging, which not only place his life in immense danger, but all his friends as well.

Beyond the DarknessReview:
I knew there had to be more to come after Predators of Darkness: Aftermath, but I just wasn’t sure what.  After all, the Lucas-clone got away, and, well, it just couldn’t be over.  There was too much corruption, too many secrets, too many unanswered questions.  Plus, I had the sequel, given to me so generously by the author (thank you Leonard!).
Three years have passed since Predators of Darkness: Aftermath, and all the survivors are back in the real, outside world.  The evil mastermind behind the shifter experiment is dead, and therefore the nightmare is over.  But Daniel’s isn’t.  He can’t accept that it’s all over, that they’re all safe.  He just can’t shake the paranoia he acquired during his time in Pittsburgh. 
Turns out, he was right.  Lucas’ clone kills four senators and the real-Lucas is arrested for the murder.  To prove his friend’s innocence, Daniel will have to renter a world he never wished to see again.  And this time, they’re all in danger: Daniel, Julia, their daughter Felicia, Nancy, Lucas, Lydia, Dr Helmsby and Johanna...
I admit, I wasn’t entirely sure where the plot would go, but I found myself being pulled in straight away and just as addicted.  I raced through it, hooked: it was amazing and the pace was perfect.  And it was the same adrenaline-filled roller-coaster as the previous book, the one I simply adore.
Daniel was very withdrawn at the start of the book, constantly in fear of the shifters, damaged by the nightmarish time three years ago.  He’s married to Julia now, who’s just as strong and brave as ever.  The two have a daughter, Felicia.  And a shifter-cat called Morton.  I loved Morton!  He’s a good shifter, created by Helmsby, who has the ability to tell right from wrong.  And a very good sense of humour.  He would do anything for his family, and his witty remarks kept even the darkest bits amusing.
I still love the very reckless, brave and caring Lucas.  A few characters I didn’t like in the first I grew to love: Johanna and Lydia to name a few. 
Lucas’ clone had a name of his own in this book: Lucian.  You got to know him as a person, and I even felt sorry for him.  Idris treated him horribly, even using genetic blackmail on him.  Only a great author could make me feel for a guy who would’ve murdered everyone in the previous book.
I can’t wait to see where Game of Pawns takes this series, and I know that it will be just as fast paced and addictive as the rest of them.  I really recommend this, not just for teenagers or YA readers, but for adults as well.  It’s one of those that crosses between the two age groups so easily it appears to be effortless.  I love the twists, turns, the amazingly detailed characters and plots.  I can’t wait to get back into this world again!
P.S. And, can I just say, it was the coolest thing to have the FBI involved.  Supernatural-thriller meets police-drama.  Two genres I love.


Star Rating:
4½ Out of 5



Read this book if you liked:
YA Thriller:
Cherub by Robert Muchamore (Same Adrenaline Rush)
Agent 21 by Chris Ryan
YA Horror:
Gone by Michael Grant
The Dead by Charlie Higson

Adult:
Stephen King novels


Challenges It's Taking Part In:
Happy Reading
Megan
*This book was recieved from the author in exchange for an honest review

Thursday, 5 May 2011

Predators of Darkness: Aftermath by Leonard D. Hilley II

Series: The Darkness, Book One
Publisher: Outskirts Press
Format: eBook
Published: 11th April 2007
Number of Pages: 340
Book: For Review From Author*
Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi, Thriller, YA-Adult Crossover, YA
Recommended Age: 15+
Contains: A Lot of (Awesome!) Violence, Sexual Scenes, Swearing, Difficult And Too-Mature Subjects for Younger Readers: Touches On Rape, But No Graphic Scenes
No Alcohol, Drug References
Author's Blog: Deimosweb

Synopsis From Goodreads:
 Fear What Lurks In The Shadows
The desolate streets of downtown Pittsburgh in 2073 are a reminder of the missile attack that forever changed the lives of the surviving scientists and students hidden in the fallout shelter of Helmsby’s Genetic Research Center. Believing themselves to be the only survivors, they station themselves inside the center until food supplies near depletion. Thinking the fallout has lessened, they emerge three years later to discover strange creatures patrolling the streets in search of human flesh and blood. The creatures possess the ability to shift their genomes and alter their appearances by realigning their genetic sequences. Daniel Hutchinson, their leader, teams with Lucas Ridale and together they set out to scavenge the area for food and supplies with the hope to find other survivors. But Daniel’s most recent journey uncovers mysteries more frightening than the shifters. He discovers the tip of Pittsburgh has been fenced off from the rest of the area. Low-flying helicopters observe the streets, making him ponder the question: Were the shifters released as simply part of a military experiment with humans being their prey?

Review:
I was lucky enough to get an email from the author asking if I would like to read this book, the other two in the series, and then if I’d like to interview him.  Of course, how could I say no?  The blurb drew me in, the premise was brilliant.  And, after finishing the book, I can honestly say that I loved it!  So thank you, Leonard D. Hilley II!
From the first sentence, I was hooked.  This was mainly because I wasn’t sure whether I should laugh or not.  The sentence was:
“Dropping a cat from the top ledge of a ten-story office building was not the best way to remain hidden, but it was necessary.”
It got better from there.  I was drawn into Pittsburgh, 2071, and a world after a missile attack that’s left only a few bands of survivors.  And, to make things worse, there are horrifying creatures, known as ‘shifters’.  The name comes from how they are able to change their form, “manipulate their own genomes” into any shape they want.  But the mutation has left them hungry for human flesh.  On top of that, they can heal themselves of just about anything, even grow back limbs.  Which makes them insanely hard to kill: not such a good thing for our male protagonist, Daniel.  But, the shifters are genetically impossible: how can anything evolve so much in three years?  They shouldn’t be here.  So how are they?  Who – or what – is behind them? 
Leonard D. Hilley’s world was brilliantly thought out, and felt very real, almost like I was there – which is, can I just say, a terrifying feeling.  The way Hilley slowly reveals snippets of information was addictive, and I loved how there were so many mysteries, lies, secrets and twists, all of which left me reeling.
The characters were brilliant too: Daniel, the leader, who was brave and strong, but haunted by the past: lives he’s lost, his memories, nightmares.  He was easily likeable, and I admired him.  One of the characters that intrigued me the most was Dr. Helmsby: I couldn’t quite figure him out.  He was undeniably brilliant, driven, slightly obsessive and a charismatic genius, yet was at the same time slightly distant.  I just got a feeling, as I read about him... that he knew more than he was telling...  Lucas was insane, a risk-taker, and Daniel’s second-in-command: reckless and slightly unhinged – in my opinion, anyway.  Finally, Julia – who was in love with Daniel – was smart, brave and funny: very easy to like.
Something unique about this book is that it doesn’t skirt around subjects like death, violence and... um, sex-esque scenes.  I could tell it was written for mid teens – and may I just say, the writing was brilliant – and it definitely didn’t talk down to them, like some books do, which I think they’ll appreciate.  What with that, the non-stop action, suspense and violence, I know that adrenaline-junkie-fifteen-plus-teenagers will love Predators of Darkness: Aftermath, especially with the strong sci-fi undercurrents.  It’s also one of those books that just grabs you from the word go, pulls you in, and takes you on a break-neck-speed adventure that you just can’t leave until the book – or the series- is finished. 
What I loved most was the message: humans should be careful when they mess with science.  If one person gets the information and wants to use it for the wrong reasons, then, bam!  We’re in a world like Predators of Darkness.  It honestly isn’t a stretch to imagine.  If you don’t fully understand what you’re doing, it can go bad, very bad.  The thought was there all through the book, and it terrified me.  It should terrify you too...
From the ending, I know there has to be more, that there’s worse to come.  And I can’t wait to re-enter the world, and find out where it goes next...

Star Rating:
4½ Out of 5


Read this book if you liked:
Adult:
Stephen King Books
Watchers or Mr Murder by Dean Koontz
YA:
The Dead by Charlie Higson
The Demonata or The Saga of Darren Shan by Darren Shan

Challenges It's Taking Part In:
Happy Reading
Megan
*This book was recieved from the author in exchange for an honest review

Sunday, 10 April 2011

Portal by Imogen Rose

Series: The Portal Chronicles, Book One
Publisher: Unknown
Format: Kindle Edition
Published: 20th January 2011
Number of Pages: 350
Book: Bought
Genre: Time-Travel, Sci-Fi, Romance, Paranormal, Mystery, YA
Recommended Age: 11+
Contains One Incident of Mild Violence, No Swearing or Sexual References


Come Find Me Two Years Ago...
Six words that propelled ice hockey playing tomboy, Arizona, into an alternate dimension.
She suddenly found herself in the past. In one moment she went from being an ice hockey playing teenager in New Jersey to a glamorous cheerleader in California. She found herself transported from a happy life with her dad, Dillard, to a new, strange one living with her mother whom she hates. Apparently it's a life she's always lived in.
Everyone knows her as Arizona Darley, but she isn't. She is Arizona Stevens.
As she struggles to find answers she is certain of one thing- that her mother Olivia, a brilliant physicist, is somehow responsible. .
PORTAL is the story of the repercussions of Olivia Darley's attempt at creating a perfect world for herself and her children. Arizona's quest for answers threatens to undermine the seemingly perfect world that her mother has so carefully constructed.
PORTAL is the first book of the Portal Chronicles. Fans of time travel, romance, and the supernatural will enjoy Arizona's quest for answers.

Review:
Once again, lots of split reviews over this book.  I can see why, now that I’ve read the book.  I loved the idea of the book, and the plot was good, if a little slow at times.  It was the language that bugged me: it was all overly formal, and didn’t flow at all.  And how many 17-or-so teenage boys say:
“I feel tremendous pressure to do so.”? 
It just didn’t sound right to me, and the language went on like that.  For example:
"She is being taken up to x-ray now. She said that she's absolutely fine, but I guess they want to make sure. She is right there on the gurney." 
Does that sound like part of a normal conversation to you?  To me, it just isn’t how someone would speak casually, or naturally. 
That was my only negative point about the book though.  I loved the alternate world side of it, and how one day our protagonist, Arizona, just wakes up and realises she isn’t in her own universe.  She’s no longer a tomboy, but a cheerleader, she has friends she doesn’t know and no idea what on Earth’s going on.  It was just the way Imogen Rose jumps between the first person told from the POV of Arizona and then third person from her mother, Olivia, which I thought was brilliant and worked incredibly well.  And the way she slowly revealed little snippets of information, mainly through flashbacks from Arizona’s mother was pure genius.  Everything just fell into place slowly, and there were twists that knocked me completely off balance.   
I really liked Arizona: she was strong and believably frustrated at suddenly being trapped in an alternate world.  That was completely understandable, though I didn’t really get why she seemed more concerned with ice hockey that with getting back to her own time.  Then again, we all cope in different ways, and I think this was her way of dealing.  I really liked her, and the way she stood up for herself, even feeling sorry for her, and completely confused with her.  The supporting characters were brilliant as well – Kellan, Ella, Ariele and Harry to name a few – although some of them could be padded out a little more.  As for Arizona’s mother, I started off hating her, because that was how Arizona saw her.  But then, with the help of a few flashbacks, I started to realise why.  It was hard to hate her so much then.
I loved the sci-fi romance and the time-travel, wanting to know what was going on just as much as Arizona did.  It took me a while to get into – mainly because I was reading The Hunger Games, which is completely addictive – but when all the twists began, I was hooked.
Portal was not the best written, but the plot made up for it.  I don’t want to give anything away, but the ending was such an unexpected cliffhanger it’s untrue.  Now, I need the next book in the series, because I really want to know what happens next!
Overall, the plot was slow to begin with, but full of mystery and surprises.  I really liked it.  The only drawback: the writing.  Which is honestly such a shame, because otherwise this would have gotten far closer to a 5 from me.

 
Star Rating:
3¾ Out of 5



Read this book if you liked:
Trylle Trilogy by Amanda Hocking
My Blood Approves by Amanda Hocking
The Seeker Series (Blood of Gold) by B. V. Larson


Challenges It's Taking Part In: