Review of The Curse of Sotkari Ta

The first novel in Maria Perez’s space opera series really lives up to its billing as a steamy romance. Our heroine Mina is kidnapped from Earth because, unbeknownst to her, she has alien DNA that gives her telekinetic abilities. Taken to a faraway galaxy and trained against her will for war, Mina discovers that part of this alien DNA she never asked for is a powerful attraction to anyone else who has the genes. The end result is a soap opera tangle of men who cannot resist Mina’s charms, set against the backdrop of a rebellion against the evil Lostai empire.

I’m not usually a reader of the steamier end of the romance spectrum, and this got a bit wordy and slow at times. But I enjoyed the elaborate world building and the galactic war elements, and things got really suspenseful at the end. Readers of romance, especially those who like the racier side of the genre, should hurry up and get your copy of The Curse of Sotkari Ta

Review of Through Stranger Eyes

I just finished Through Stranger Eyes by Chris Sarantopoulos, and wow, I recommend you check it out here.

There’s so much to say about this book. It starts with a great mystery, moves through revelations that keep getting more and more powerful, creates potent suspense, has an empathetic main character, and a couple good side characters.

Pros:

The MC’s rejection by his hospital and his wife really made me feel for him. I kept turning pages hoping things got better. 

Solpeau and Sherry are both well-characterized. 

The ending is practically guaranteed to take you by surprise. 

Cons:

The conflict between the different “matriarchs” was hard to keep track of, as were the various groups of non-matriarch people Rick encounters on his journey.

The book is marred by editing errors and by some structural flaws.

A gruesome scene in the middle.

Overall I really enjoyed reading Through Stranger Eyes. Be warned about a bit of horrifying content in the middle, but otherwise, grab your copy here.

Review of Red Sky at Morning

Red Sky at Morning is a suspenseful, fun sci-fi thriller and I recommend that you read it. Grab your copy here.

I’m volunteering as a judge in the third annual Self Published Science Fiction Competition, and I read Red Sky at Morning as part of that contest. My review here does not reflect anything other than my own opinion, and may have no relation to whether the book advances in the contest.

Red Sky at Morning is a thriller set in a future where humans have colonized Mars. It starts with a man framed for a crime he didn’t commit and a jaded detective put on the case by mysterious forces. It races through one revelation after another, some of them truly surprising. The pulse-pounding conclusion had me tearing through the last third of the book unable to put it down.

It’s not perfect. Some of the challenges before the characters fall too easily. Some of them have mysterious proficiencies that are just too convenient. Overall, though, the suspense more than makes up for the flaws and I truly enjoyed this read.

Check out Red Sky at Morning at this link.

Review of Apocalypse Parenting by Erin Ampersand

Apocalypse Parenting is just flat out fun. You should read it. Buy your copy at this link.

I’m a judge in the 3rd annual Self Published Science Fiction Contest, part of team Tar Vol On, and each member of the team was assigned a certain number of books to read. People in SPSFC use a 10-point rating system, which I’ll use internally, but I don’t think I’ll post those scores publicly. Any internal score that I use in judging SPSFC3 will be entirely unrelated to the number of stars on Amazon, because I’m a super wimpy Amazon reviewer and I don’t post a review there unless I can, in good conscience, give it four or five stars.

Alright, Caveats aside, let’s dive in to this awesome book!

Apocalypse Parenting: Time to Play (Book 1 in a series) is from a genre called “LitRPG,” of which I had read nothing before this. Basically, in this genre, the story is told from the point of view of a character in a video game. In the case of this book, aliens turn all of human existence into a life and death video game for their amusement, and the characters must survive the introduction of monsters, gain experience, learn new powers, etc. like a game.

My first instinct was suspicion of the premise. It seemed kind of silly. But the book just plunges in without feeling any obligation to explain it, and I thought that method really succeeded in getting me to suspend disbelief. It only took a page or two before I was immersed in a world where characters had to pick starting abilities and start fighting creatures in their front yard.

The series gets its title from the fact that the main character is the mother of three. Her husband was off on a business trip when the aliens turned the earth into a video game, so we meet her trying to handle three kids alone in the middle of the apocalypse.

Her name is Meghan Moretti and she carries this entire show. She’s so authentically believable that she just instantly sells the reader all the crazy stuff that happens to her and her family.

Another element that really worked is the lighthearted element of whimsy that comes with this book. Any time you’re trying to corral three kids, chaos is going to ensue, and these kids give the new monsters hilarious names, accidentally animate their stuffed animals from not understanding abilities, and ride around in a wagon turned into a tank, which the kids want to call “Wank” but our MC insists on naming “Tagon.”

This lighthearted fun eases the threshold for willing suspension of disbelief, making it easier to accept the premise, and the harried “single” (for purposes of this story) mom MC trying to balance keeping her kids out of trouble with leveling up as a video game character simply made me smile through the whole thing.

I caught a couple (literally two) typos, and I thought the plot structure could have been better, but overall I loved this book.

A note about the cover: people in book marketing say that your cover makes a promise to your reader about what they can expect if they read it. I have never seen a more accurate promise made by a book cover. This cover IS the first 20% of this book.

I will advocate among my team for Apocalypse Parenting to advance in the contest, and I’ll probably even buy the sequel.

Check out Apocalypse Parenting today!

If you like science fiction, you can check my own Sci-Fi out at www.ExileWar.com.

Review of Darkness Enthroned by Stephen Zimmer

Darkness Enthroned by Stephen Zimmer scared the daylights out of me with its suspense! Don’t read this at night, it might be a bit too frightening.

A tale of sword and sorcery, it introduces us to a tribe of warriors called the Sarvans, tracking their enemies the Attuns. With the Sarvans is Rayden, a female warrior not of their tribe, but traveling with them. The pursuit of their foes leads to dark magic of a kind they never expected. Rayden and her fellow travelers will be lucky if they escape with their lives.

Delightfully free of profanity or explicit sex, Darkness Enthroned does tell a story about frightening dark magic, so some readers may want to step lightly. But overall this is a treat for lovers of clean fiction and a great story to boot. The suspense of this short, quick read will keep you turning pages until the very last one.

Click here to get your copy today!

Visit Stephen Zimmer’s website to learn more.

And if you like fantasy and science fiction, check out my own upcoming Exile War universe!

Another great sci fi novel!

star crossingI just finished reading Star Crossing, by Alexis Glynn Latner. It’s the third novel in the Aeon’s Legacy series. I’ll get to the point right away: if you like science fiction, read this book and read the whole series!

The Aeon’s Legacy series tells the story of the slower-than-light colony ship Aeon, setting out from a dying Earth to find a new home for humanity. Because distances in space are so vast, and light is so slow, the colonists mostly make the journey in stasis, or suspended animation. When their first destination proves unworkable as a future home, Aeon sets out on a thousand-year voyage across space, with her precious human cargo back in stasis. While they’re frozen in time, though, the rest of the universe goes on without them. Aeon’s Legacy is a story about 21st century humans encountering a universe vastly changed from the one they left.

Star Crossing is a different kind of book from the first two books of the series. Hurricane Moon, the first book, was very hard science fiction. Downfall Tide, the second, introduced more speculative elements but also ramped up the pace of the action. Now, the third book keeps the action going non-stop, but also stretches the speculative nature of speculative fiction farther than ever before. Energy beings that get into ships electrical systems, something akin to a Bermuda Triangle in space, and more give the protagonists plenty of reason to stretch their skills to the utmost.

What I love about this series is the author’s interest in moral and ethical issues. Some of the protagonists’ actions to save themselves lead to wildly unintended consequences and condemnation from the rest of the human race. Latner is always revealing surprising outcomes of characters’ past actions, and weaving them together in a way that shows the interconnectedness of humanity.

So often in Hollywood and the Big Five publishers, if you see a reference to faith, you can safely assume you’re being set up to see the character as a hypocrite or a villain. Latner is beautifully, refreshingly different. Many if not most of her characters are religious and though their specific beliefs are often very different from mine, no one – from Christians to Wiccans to everything in between – is ever a caricature or a parody. Their faith is a serious part of who they are, and treated with respect. For that, even when I disagree with her, I will always recommend Latner’s books to anyone who will listen.

What I don’t like about this series is that through her characters, the author advocates for some opinions that I don’t share. I know that many folks read my books and my website because I do my best to provide an alternative to the profane, hypersexualized entertainment industry in America; for them I must warn that Star Crossing includes profanity, sexuality that’s definitely present though not explicit, and some politicization of sex and sexuality.

The beautifully constructed world is more than worth averting your eyes a few times, though. The rich, authentic characters and the studious eye for ethics and morality make the whole series, and Star Crossing in particular, books you shouldn’t miss. My advice is to buy them today!

Book Review: Downfall Tide by Alexis Latner

the cover of Downfall Tide

the cover of Downfall Tide
the cover of Downfall Tide

Downfall Tide by Alexis Latner is the sequel to Hurricane Moon, that I reviewed a couple weeks ago. If you liked the first book, you’re going to love this one. The characters you love are back, along with a profound new threat.

In the first novel in this series, colonists from Earth aboard the ship Aeon crossed a thousand years of space and time in stasis, searching for a new home. But the universe did not stand still while they slept. Now, as they struggle to establish a colony on a new world, danger rushes in from a direction no one expected.

This book has the same weaknesses as its predecessor — a bit of language and non-standard theology — and the same strengths as well. The author very deliberately intends her stories to ask questions about religion, and she treats her religious characters with respect. There is none of the typical entertainment industry caricature of Christians here. What’s more, she even manages to inject some wilder elements into the science of the story, while still keeping her hard sci-fi edge.

I loved Downfall Tide. You should read it.