by Kim Catanzarite ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 1, 2021
Well-constructed science fiction with an admirable heroine and a chilling premise.
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A woman marries into a peculiar family that’s obsessed with her pregnancy in this SF novel.
In 1965, the small town of Kirksberg, Pennsylvania, had a famous UFO sighting that the townsfolk celebrate in a big yearly festival. For 23-year-old adoptive sisters Helena and Sveta Peterman, that festival means scooping lots of ice cream at the shop where they work. The sisters are close, especially because their humanitarian mother and father are always traveling, and when Helena eventually leaves Kirksberg to find her biological parents, Sveta feels abandoned. Maybe that’s why she’s less guarded than usual when ice cream customer Andrew Jovian, a 28-year-old man with kind, blue-green eyes, asks her out. Their connection is undeniable, and they quickly marry, and although Sveta’s happy, she’s annoyed by Andrew’s overbearing family. They’re the wealthy owners of Kirksberg telescope maker Starbright International, and they’re relentlessly focused on Sveta’s new pregnancy—so much so that Sveta and Andrew move away to another Starbright location in North Carolina. But circumstances bring the Jovians back into Sveta’s life for reasons that are bizarre and shocking. Sveta soon faces a battle to protect her baby that will require all her bravery and resolve. In her debut novel, Catanzarite builds tension well and uses it for maximum effect. At first, Sveta’s in-laws merely seem to lack social skills, but as the novel goes on, their agenda becomes clearer and more frightening, especially after Sveta learns how the aforementioned spaceship sighting connects with Starbright’s goals. The author also skillfully handles Sveta’s characterization, making her vulnerability plausible in the absence of her sister and parents. Similarly, the protagonist’s fierce maternal love helps to explain how she’s able to gather the courage to stand up against powerful forces.
Well-constructed science fiction with an admirable heroine and a chilling premise.Pub Date: June 1, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-73595-221-5
Page Count: 387
Publisher: Forster Publishing
Review Posted Online: Dec. 16, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by James Islington ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 23, 2023
A multilayered exploration of the complacent as complicit, all within a unique yet relatable magic system.
An orphaned prince on the run gets a chance at freedom if he can become one of his would-be enslavers.
Three years ago, when the Hierarchy killed his family, 17-year-old Vis Solum had to hide in their Republic, bury his rage, and pretend to support the population’s enslavement in order to survive. The Hierarchy is built on Will—a person’s mental and physical energy—ceded by the low to those above them, and then again, all the way to the top of the three pyramids of leadership: Military, Governance, and Religion. Will powers carts and carriages, keeps vaults locked, and gives Will-users inhuman abilities while sapping ceders of their health and life span. So far, Vis has managed to refuse the ritual to cede his Will. Now, he has little more than a year before he legally has to cede or have his Will drained by Sappers. When Senator Quintus Ulciscor Telimus offers Vis the chance to escape ceding for at least another year, and perhaps never do it at all, Vis agrees. The man officially adopts him so he can attend the Catenan Academy, where all students are tested and prepared for the highest Hierarchy positions. If Vis dominates at the Academy, he can choose a position where he doesn’t need to cede or receive Will at all, far away from the Hierarchy. In return, Vis must act as a spy to prove Religion is unearthing a dangerous weapon. Then, when Vis is blackmailed to act as a double agent, everything changes. In order to succeed, he must become one of those he so hates while keeping his true identity a secret. If he doesn’t, he’ll end up dead, or worse. This Roman-inspired fantasy starts slow but more than makes up for it soon enough. With the inevitable comparisons in mind, fans of Pierce Brown's Red Rising will enjoy this book, but it’s darker, deeper, and takes unexpected paths worth traveling. Trust that the author will get you there in the end.
A multilayered exploration of the complacent as complicit, all within a unique yet relatable magic system.Pub Date: May 23, 2023
ISBN: 9781982141172
Page Count: 688
Publisher: Saga/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: March 27, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2023
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BOOK REVIEW
by Daniel Suarez ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 24, 2023
An ambitious but plodding space odyssey.
Having survived a disastrous deep space mission in 2038, three asteroid miners plan a return to their abandoned ship to save two colleagues who were left behind.
Though bankrolled through a crooked money laundering scheme, their original project promised to put in place a program to reduce the CO2 levels on Earth, ease global warming, and pave the way for the future. The rescue mission, itself unsanctioned, doesn't have a much better chance of succeeding. All manner of technical mishaps, unplanned-for dangers, and cutthroat competition for the precious resources from the asteroid await the three miners. One of them has cancer. The international community opposes the mission, with China, Russia, and the United States sending questionable "observers" to the new space station that gets built north of the moon for the expedition. And then there is Space Titan Jack Macy, a rogue billionaire threatening to grab the riches. (As one character says, "It's a free universe.") Suarez's basic story is a good one, with tense moments, cool robot surrogates, and virtual reality visions. But too much of the novel consists of long, sometimes bloated stretches of technical description, discussions of newfangled financing for "off-world" projects, and at least one unneeded backstory. So little actually happens that fixing the station's faulty plumbing becomes a significant plot point. For those who want to know everything about "silicon photovoltaics" and "orthostatic intolerance," Suarez's latest SF saga will be right up their alley. But for those itching for less talk and more action, the book's many pages of setup become wearing.
An ambitious but plodding space odyssey.Pub Date: Jan. 24, 2023
ISBN: 978-0-593-18363-2
Page Count: 464
Publisher: Dutton
Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2022
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