by Drew Bankston ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
Epic worldbuilding that’s compelling in its ambition, if not always in its execution.
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In this SF novel from Bankston, two enemies must work together to right the historical record and prevent an interstellar war.
Thirty-two-year-old Linsorais half-human, half-Khizaran and displays volatile emotions and ingrained knife-fighting instincts, as is typical in Khizaran culture. An archaeologist by profession, she also has the ability to “hear” voices from the past in her mind. This has led her to discover certain historical artifacts that, if reported, would keep her employers, the Carratians, from legally undertaking a lucrative mining operation on a historic site. Instead, they accuse her of stealing from them and get her thrown her in prison. Linsora blames her situation on her erstwhile crewmate, 34-year-old Permac; he’s a Tokorellan, a member of an alien species that’s widely distrusted, due to their ability to influence people’s emotions. The Tokorellans used to be Khizarans; the two cultures separated 200 years ago when the former gained their mental powers. Since then, a great enmity has existed between them, fueled by vastly different accounts of the schism. Permac feels responsible for Linsora’s plight, as he didn’t expect that Linsora would remain imprisoned after he reported her, so he breaks her out of prison. The two remain at loggerheads but are thrown together in common cause—first to flee from the Carratians, then to revisit the archaeological dig and establish the truth of Linsora’s findings. Everything changes when they uncover an ancient recording from a key historical figure, and learn that both their people’s accepted histories are inaccurate. As they develop feelings for each other, they determine to publicly reveal the truth and end the simmering hostility between their peoples.
Bankston writes in the omniscient past-tense, most often from Linsora or Permac’s perspective but occasionally from that of a lesser player. The prose is exuberant from the outset, stumbling over itself in a rush to impart information: “She froze, instinctively reaching for a knife—the weapon of choice on her home world, Khizara. Her subconscious mind reminded her she was still in prison, and correctional officers deprived her of the luxury of carrying a knife upon entry.” This ebullience extends to the dialogue, with characters prone to relating exposition, wholly for the reader’s benefit: “I’ve noticed that your clothes aren’t bulky but have a lot of flowing fabric. I imagine it’s more for functionality than anything—and for carrying knives.” This tendency will likely grate upon those readers who prefer sharper, more immersive prose. Still, there lies within it a clear sincerity of vision. Bankston has conceived a vast, intricately woven tapestry of spacefaring worlds. Permac and Linsora are likable representatives of the enemies-to-lovers trope, and of two peoples whose mutual hostility is underpinned by long history. The characters’ journey, as it gains momentum across the many pages, is sure to pull readers in. One could argue that a book of more than 500 pages in length should offer more closure, rather than simply leading into a continuation, but the journey is mostly satisfying, nonetheless. Epic worldbuilding that’s compelling in its ambition, if not always in its execution.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: 9780997554717
Page Count: 508
Publisher: OldStache Publishing
Review Posted Online: May 6, 2023
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by S.B. Divya ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 2, 2021
Intriguing worldbuilding plus a fast-paced plot equals catnip for SF fans.
Welga Ramirez thought she was done in the security field. She couldn’t have been more wrong.
Welga is a shield—a bodyguard working for wealthy funders who develop pills to enhance human performance so people can compete with bots and AIs. It’s all theater. Fight with style and watch the tips roll in from the public watching via swarms of microcam drones. Welga is three months from the end of her contract when an attack on one of her clients actually turns deadly. Something called “the Machinehood” takes credit and gives humankind a week to stop producing pills, or else. Now Welga, along with the rest of the world, must race to answer the question: Is the Machinehood really the world’s first truly sentient AI? And if not, who’s threatening the entire world’s way of life—and why? Meanwhile, Welga’s having muscle spasms when she comes down from pills, which aren't supposed to have side effects. Can her biogeneticist sister-in-law, Nithya, figure out what’s going on before the spasms get worse? Divya has created a richly imagined and eerily familiar world filled with insecure workers cobbling together freelance gigs and families dependent on rapidly designed and home-manufactured vaccines to protect against new bugs. It’s a world without privacy, where every activity is performed for a crowd in hopes of getting tips—and a world confronting urgent questions about humans’ place in a society increasingly run by AIs. Simply taking a tour of this world is well worth the reader’s time, but Welga’s and Nithya’s quests also rocket the plot along toward an unexpected yet satisfying conclusion.
Intriguing worldbuilding plus a fast-paced plot equals catnip for SF fans.Pub Date: March 2, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-9821-4806-5
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Saga/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2021
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BOOK REVIEW
by S.B. Divya
by Lauren Thoman ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 2023
A novel look at strange (and stranger) things.
“The future’s open wide” according to “I Melt With You,” the song by Modern English that lends other lyrics to the title of this time-looping fiction debut. Maybe they meant the past, too?
Justin Warren, a disaffected student waiting for high school to end, finds himself enmeshed in hard-to-explain (and understand) circumstances in this mystery saga of time travel, adolescent heartache, and coming-of-age angst. Finding himself transported after an accident from 2023 to the year 1985, Justin is confronted with perplexing details about his complicated family history. Among the pre-millennial teens Justin meets is Rose Yin, a do-gooder and diligent student who becomes one of his few allies in unraveling the mysteries of not only his time travel, but also a 1985 crime that affected the course of his family’s life. (Rounding out the cast of characters for both settings are enough teens, teachers, and family members of varying backgrounds, sexual orientations, and personality types to populate whatever screen adaptation of the work results from the book’s selection by Mindy Kaling for her Mindy’s Book Studio publishing and production project.) Realizing he may have a last-minute opportunity to alter his family’s tragic history, Justin puzzles through the facts as he recalls them and the truths he uncovers in his new (old) hometown. While dealing with her own teenage miseries and insecurities, Rose lends a sympathetic ear and transportation to the out-of-sync Justin—who bemoans the lack of crime-solving technology available to him in 1985 and struggles to use a rotary phone in one hilarious episode. Thoman’s ambitious timeline of events is both expansive and compressed, with the storyline unfolding over the course of both one week and 38 years, and her portrayal of teenagers in varying degrees of crisis is sympathetic.
A novel look at strange (and stranger) things.Pub Date: April 1, 2023
ISBN: 9781662509971
Page Count: 446
Publisher: Mindy's Book Studio
Review Posted Online: Jan. 24, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2023
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