Category Archives: Reviews

SFRevu Review: Lockstep by Karl Schroeder

In the Lockstep world, whole planet’s sleep for decades only to wake for a month at a time, but all in lockstep with other worlds on their frequency. Another brilliant idea from Karl Schroeder.

Review by Ernest Lilley
Originally published in SFRevu: March 2014, Lockstep

When Toby McGoingal wakes fourteen thousand years into the future, having survived meteor impact while in cryo-suspension, he has a number of surprises waiting for him. For one thing, he’s the heir to everything his family owned, which happens to be an empire that spans star systems as well as centuries. On the other hand, he’d have to dispose his brother, who rules over all of it, and has for the last forty years. Continue reading

Fortune’s Pawn (Paradox Series) by Rachel Bach

91zjLdxLsAL._SL1500_Fortune’s Pawn (Paradox Series) Bach, Rachel

Review originally published in SFRevu, March 2014: http://sfrevu.com/php/Review-id.php?id=15243

Publisher’s Information: Devi Morris isn’t your average mercenary. She has plans. Big ones. And a ton of ambition. It’s a combination that’s going to get her killed one day – but not just yet.

That is, until she just gets a job on a tiny trade ship with a nasty reputation for surprises. The Glorious Fool isn’t misnamed: it likes to get into trouble, so much so that one year of security work under its captain is equal to five years everywhere else. With odds like that, Devi knows she’s found the perfect way to get the jump on the next part of her Plan. But the Fool doesn’t give up its secrets without a fight, and one year on this ship might be more than even Devi can handle.

If Sigouney Weaver in Alien met Starbuck in Battlestar Galactica, you’d get Deviana Morris — a hot new mercenary earning her stripes to join an elite fighting force. Until one alien bite throws her whole future into jeopardy.

Review

Devi Morris is a kick-butt kind of girl, but her biological clock is ticking as she closes in on the big three-oh. She’s not looking to settle down and raise a brood of hell-raisers though, she’s looking at the end of her meteoric rise as a powered armor mercenary in an elite outfit. She’s gone as far as she can go without getting a desk job, and that’s the last thing she wants. What she really wants is a shot at joining her King’s ultra-elite troops, the Devastators. Unfortunately, even her resume as a one woman blitzkrieg won’t get her in until she’s got more seasoning, so she hits up her friend Anthony, who’s worked with the elite unit, to tell her how to hack the requirements.

Since she won’t be sensible and settle down with him for a safe if boring ever after, he tells her to sign on for a tour as security for a trading vessel for a year or so and the Devastators will probably be willing to admit she’s ready. Not just any trader, but the Glorious Fool, Brian Caldswell’s scarred hulk of a ship. The one that goes through security staff like most vessels go through reaction mass. For some reason the King’s forces keep a very close eye on the Fool.

Normally, no action-hungry merc would consider babysitting cargo, but she trusts Anthony’s intel, and drags her custom-made powered armor up to the loading dock where Caldswell is interviewing applicants. Her record may not qualify her for the Devastators yet, but it makes for the shortest interview of her career and she finds herself signed on as half the security detail, and if the base pay isn’t all that hot, the hazard pay per “incident,” might leave her comfortably well off, if not in one piece.

The other half of the team is Cotter, a hulking he-man whose armor dwarfs Devi’s suit and whose passion is divided between swinging a thousand pound battle axe and telling stories about himself. He’s also a leering jerk, but Devi knows how to handle these things, and putting him on his back for an intimate conversation about who’s boss isn’t much of a challenge.

The crew of the Fool is the classic mix of scruffy types these sorts of ships attract. The pilot and second-in-command is an avian alien (think Big Bird with an attitude),  the sensor tech is from a cultist space station where they teach oneness with the universe and a few nifty psionic skills, the engineer is a friendly tech absorbed gal who divides her affection between her cat and her engines, and the ship’s doc is a reformed flesh eating lizard from one of the races (the xith’cal) that has a shoot-on-site grudge with the captain. There’s also the Captain’s daughter, who sits in the ship’s lounge playing a nonstop game of chess from both sides but never makes eye contact with anyone, which is just a little creepy.

“…I caught sight of the man behind the girl and everything else became superfluous. Now this, this was more like it. The man was gorgeous. He was tall and pale, but beautifully so, with shoulder-blade-length black hair tied at his neck. His eyes were a lovely bright blue under dark eyebrows, and his mouth looked quick to smile. He was wearing a black suit, not the ones they wore in Kingston with the wide lapels, but the old-fashioned Terran kind with the high collar that I’d always considered dashing…I could see enough of his posture to know that he had some military training. Combine that with his long-fingered hands and broad, sloping shoulders and I was suddenly feeling much, much better about this job.”

And then there’s the cook.

Rupert, the cook, who it turns out is way more than a cook, unless you’re talking about Steven Segal in Under Seige, except likeable, and even then raised to a power of about ten, has secrets to keep. In fact, and no surprise, the entire ship has secrets that Devi isn’t supposed to worry her mercenary little head about, but the initiative that makes her so good at what she does also gets her closer to the truth about what the Glorious Fool is up to than she’s supposed to.

Normally, the captain has a simple policy for dealing with this sort of thing, but he’s taken a liking to her, or at least her ability to repel the alien boarding parties that seem to spring up around him, so he’s reluctant to just kill her off. And despite Rupert’s cool exterior and unflappable focus, Devi’s gotten to him as much as he’s gotten to her. Sure, our gal likes a steady diet of hunks to jump, but Rupert’s gotten under her skin in a big way from the start, and that’s going to make things really complicated for both of them.

When the ship finds an apparently dead xith’cal warship, Devi and Cotton are sent aboard to do recon, but when it turns out the ship isn’t all that dead, Devi has to fight her way out, but gets trapped by on overwhelming number of the aliens. She’s rescued at the last minute by a mysterious black alien that brushes the monsters aside with apparent ease and which she’s seen once before, when she went off to recover the Captain when they’d lost contact. That time she’d had to fight off an invisible creature that nobody seemed to believe had existed, and the Captain had taken measures to make sure she didn’t see the alien either, except that he didn’t count on her tenacity. This time there was no question about whether or not she could see her rescuer, who seems oddly familiar, unless the overdose of combat stims that were keeping her alive despite major wounds were making her hallucinate.

It turns out that Devi isn’t the only one who wants to know what’s going on aboard the Fool, and some of the ones that do are willing to play rough. Considering what Devi’s gone through already it would take some doing to up the ante, but…

The story is a bit overloaded with sci-fi cliches. I’m willing to grant authors warp gates, because the alternative pretty much makes interstellar conflict/commerce impossible, but I wish authors would give up their dependence on artificial gravity, which evidently works better with an atmosphere than in vacuum, one of the many bits that made me set my rose-colored space visor to maximum density. Not to mention, “…the Fool’s main cannon fired with a rumble I felt through my stabilizers. Outside, other cannons fired faintly in response…” But maybe I’m just picky.

It does seem that a critical read by someone versed in the hard stuff could have helped Bach tighten up the tech and made the book accessible to a wider audience. If you’d like to take a look at the subject done right, I whole-heartedly recommend James S. A. Corey’s second book in The Expanse series: Caliban’s War. It’s got a lot of the same elements, a small ship with an offbeat crew, a good looking gal with powered space armor, and even a nearly unkillable genetically modified alien or two. But it doesn’t cop out when it comes to stepping up to what is and isn’t possible in space-tech. Nor are the characters paper cutouts of action heroes. Devi could do worse than getting some tips from Gunnery Sergeant Bobbie Draper.

Ironically Corey’s book (which is really the writing team of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) is not only an Orbit title as well, but the third book in the series, Abbadon’s Gate, includes the first chapter of Fortune’s Pawn as an “extra.”

Fortune’s  Pawn is a wild page turner of a space opera and the first non-fantasy title from  Rachel Bach. It’s not hard-sf by any means, and if you’re not going to be satisfied with a fast paced mix of space marine mayhem and romance, you probably won’t be happy with it. On the other hand, I really want to know what happens to Devi and her starcrossed cook next, so I’ll be making myself some hot space coco and kicking back with book two of the series. Knight’s Honor, as soon as it comes out.

Good Junk by Ed Kovacs

Cliff St James is about as tough an ex-cop private investigator as there ever was. He’d have to be to have survived Ed  Kovac’s debut novel, Storm Damage, about post Katrina mayhem in the Big Easy. But survive he did, in fact, considering that the first book found him broke and nearly homeless, he’s come up a long ways, owning an admirable array of guns, spy gadgets, a rolling arsenal or two and a nice set of digs with a fancy sub-zero refrigerator in it. Not to mention that he owns his own mixed martial arts dojo. Yes, St. James may be off the New Orleans force and scrounging up cases on his own, but he’s not down on his luck. Except that when you’re as tough as he is, the wounds that cut the deepest are the self inflicted ones, like not being able to forgive yourself for killing a sparring partner by accident.

Which is the problem that’s haunting St. James when the story opens. Miserable, off his timing, and afraid to put his weight behind a punch, St. James is hiding out from shadows, his and everyone else’s. When his almost girlfriend and sometime NOPD partner Detective Honey Baybee,  who more than lives up to the name, drops a double homicide in his lap, he knows it’s her idea of therapy, but he’s smart enough to know it’s a good idea.

St. James may be off his game, but one look at the crime scene; a white Mercedes worth 100 grand, two very pretty guys in very nice clothes, one with his skull splattered over the car’s interior, the other a few feet away, tells him that this isn’t a lover’s tryst gone wrong, but that it’s been set up to look that way. The location, the scuffed heels on pretty guy number two, even the gun – good but not flashy enough for this pair – all add up to a deal gone bad, or a setup gone right.

The chief of police is trying to hang onto his job, and needs some righteous busts to do it, which is why Honey has a letter from him confirming St. James as a consultant for the department, a nice bit of irony considering he’d axed our boy from the force for getting in his way. We suspect some arm twisting from Honey, but this is the Big Easy, and everything seems possible, especially as the city scrambles to restore itself after Katrina, when money is flooding into the streets that water covered all too recently, and quickly becomes as dirty as the septic tide it replaced.

Del Breaux, the older of the two victims, worked at NASA’s The Michoud Assembly Facility as a consultant, the feather in a long career of work on classified projects. Parks, the thirtyish guy in the car, was a shipping manager there as well, and yes they were lovers, the head of security confirms in a very uncomfortable interview in which our team isn’t as impressed by words like “Top Secret” and “compartmentalized.” Oh, and if the NOPD finds Del Breaux’s laptop, they’d really like it back.

Allow me two quick asides here. First, it’s unsurprising that Ed Kovacs gets so much right about the underside of things, from the intelligence community to the world of mixed martial arts and the third world vibe that comes off New Orleans. In science fiction, you’ll occasionally find a physicist turning to the written page to get his ideas out to a broader public. In covert ops, you’ll find someone like Kovacs. Besides spending two and a half years setting up a security company in Post Katrina New Orleans, he divides his time between security contracts on several continents and lives, sometimes, in “a hanger in a Southern California airport.” We’d tell you which one, but you don’t have a need to know. Second, among the other facts that hold up, NASA’s Michoud facility, where they built shuttle tanks before and now run a variety of projects for other agencies, weathered Katrina better than most of the city, thanks in part to geography, but in part to the staff that stayed through the storm to maintain the pumping stations, and to whom NASA gave its Exceptional Bravery Medal. New Orleans, Kovacs makes clear is an uneven muddle of people putting their lives on the line to make things better; from church volunteers coming down after the flood to cops coming together to solve a case, coupled with a loose appreciation of right and wrong all around. It’s an interesting town.

Top Secret contracting for the government may pay well, but everyone in New Orleans has something on the side, and by the time Honey reaches the offices of “Breaux Enterprises” swankly located on the 49th floor in the high price district. Following the trail back to the victims home she finds that a “cleaning” crew has been there hours before. New computers and fax machines and not a scrap of paper make it clear this isn’t a case of the boys just being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Fortunately for our team, when they reach the house, it’s been unmolested. Not unvisited, but the first floor is apartments, and the renters didn’t take kindly to a crew showing up with vans and FBI credentials at four in the morning. Evidently the cleaners didn’t want to stick around for the police to show up. When St. James shows up and starts poking around, he comes up with the missing laptop in an upstairs bathroom and, considering the way things have been disappearing, decides to let it stay missing until he can get his own specialist to take a look at it.

Hmmm. That’s a lot of detail, and the story is just getting started. Soon we’ll have three government agencies, Chinese spies, an ex spook who lives in a crypt and at the bottom of a bottle of absinthe, a high tech arms auction with high level backing, mysterious containers in a scrap yard, and a lot more going on. If St. James was on top of his game, he’d take less damage as the case unravels, but fortunately he can take quite a bit, because it’s coming his way.

The story is fast, violent, and twisty all the way to the end and my hats off to Ed Kovacs for putting it all together in a package that feels very real on a lot of levels. Throughout the action St. James struggles to make sense of his feelings, both about the man he killed in his dojo and about Honey, and what hers are for him.

At the end, a lot of water has passed by the levee, but he’s still standing, or will be after he heals up, and his character has gained some interesting new depths, which we’re looking forward to exploring in Burnt Black, due out this year.

Ern’s Reads: Agatha and the Airship City

[amazon_link id=”1597802123″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Agatha H. and the Airship City (Girl Genius)[/amazon_link]I’d never read Phil and Kaja Foglio’s Girl Genius comic, despite being drawn in by the attractively rounded girl on the cover, mostly because I don’t read a lot of comics. They just don’t last long enough for me. But i have always wanted to find out what the Girl Genius storyline was.

This novelization of the first issue, let me accomplish that though words rather than pictures, and I had a lot of fun reading it. Continue reading