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MUTINY AT VESTA

From the Shieldrunner Pirates series , Vol. 2

More rollicking space adventures for lovable pirates.

Adda, Iridian, and their pirate friends escape a killer artificial intelligence only to fall prey to an insidious corporation.

Finally free of Barbary Station and the rogue AI that trapped them there in Barbary Station (2017), Captain Sloane leads the crew, Adda and Iridian included, back to the pirates’ home base on Vesta. Adda and Iridian asked the Captain to officiate their wedding, and they’re excited to start spending their pirate booty. Expecting a hero’s welcome, they are instead met by representatives of Oxia Corporation, which took over the minor planet in Sloane’s absence. Oxia coerces the crew into running some errands, like stealing a massive printer, hijacking a prototype ship, and forcing an astronomer to sign an Oxia contract. Meanwhile, Adda discovers that the AI from Barbary Station, AegiSKADA, is alive (so to speak). It’s less powerful and under Adda’s control but still dangerous. Adda, an AI specialist, knows she should just shut it down, but she’s too tempted by what she could learn from it, and she decides to keep AegiSKADA a secret. Eventually the pirates figure out why Oxia wanted that printer, ship, and astronomer, and the secret is big enough that the pirates may be able to use it to their advantage. But Adda and Iridian may not be able to trust Captain Sloane, and the strain of keeping AegiSKADA under control is getting to Adda. Oxia’s tasks provide plenty of excitement, like when the pirates steal not just the printer, but the entire lab housing it. The virtual space where Adda interacts with the AI is inventive and makes those passages easier for readers to parse. The characters mostly take a back seat to the action, but the ending sets up a compelling premise for the upcoming third novel.

More rollicking space adventures for lovable pirates.

Pub Date: Oct. 16, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-4814-7689-8

Page Count: 480

Publisher: Saga/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Nov. 17, 2019

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A BROKEN QUEEN

From the Nine Realms series , Vol. 3

Imperfect, but well constructed and engrossing nonetheless.

Cerúlia recovers from her wounds and decides it’s finally time to take back her throne in Kozloff’s (The Queen of Raiders, 2020, etc.) penultimate Nine Realms novel.

Badly burned and laid up in a Healing Center, Cerúlia is losing faith in herself. She misses the various friends she’s made along her journey, misses her home, and resents her limitations as she heals from injuries sustained in the previous novel. In the past, her magical “Talent” for talking to animals has helped her make friends with local creatures, but she’s worried that something has happened to her ability and fears using it. As she slowly recuperates and learns from the fellow residents in the healing center, Cerúlia comes to understand that she must face her responsibility to her people and find a way to become the Queen of Weirandale. To that end, she returns home to her nation’s capital, Cascada, only to discover that her long-lost foster sister, Percia, is about to marry the kindly son of the maniacal and power-hungry Regent Matwyck, the very person keeping Cerúlia from her throne. Reunited with her beloved foster family, Cerúlia decides it is time to stop hiding under aliases and disguises. But with no army to support her, how is she supposed to save herself from Matwyck’s clutches? And now that she’s seen more of the world and understands the lives of regular people, does she even believe in the idea of monarchy at all? Kozloff finally brings the action back to Weirandale in a compelling setup to the last novel in her series. Like Book 2, this one struggles a bit with standing on its own, but Kozloff uses these pages to make Cerúlia a more complex and compelling character. Threads following other characters from other nations are easy to follow and add dimension to the world, but as of now they still feel a bit too detached from the main plotline.

Imperfect, but well constructed and engrossing nonetheless.

Pub Date: March 24, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-16866-5

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2020

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CAT'S CRADLE

A NOVEL

The narrator is researching for his book, The Day the World Ended, when he comes up against his karass, as he later understands it through Bokononism. It leads him to investigate Dr. Hoenniker, "Father of the A-Bomb," whom his son Little Newt says was playing cat's cradle when the bomb dropped (people weren't his specialty). The good doctor left his children an even greater weapon of devastation in ice-nine, an inheritance which won his ugly daughter a handsome husband; little Newt, a Russian midget just his size for an affair that ended when she absconded with a sliver of ice-nine; and made unlikely Franklin the right hand man of Papa Monzano of San Lorenzo, a make-believe Caribbean republic. On the trail of ice-nine, the narrator comes in for Papa's death and is tapped for the Presidency of San Lorenzo. Lured by sex symbol Mona, he accepts, but before he can take office, ice-nine breaks loose, freezing land and sea. Bokonon, the aged existentialist residing in the jungle as counter to the strong man, formulates a religion that makes up for life altogether: since the natives are miserable and there is little hope for changing their lot, he takes advantage of the release of ice-nine to bring them a happy death. The narrator's karass is at last made clear by Bokonon himself, leaving him to commit a final blasphemy against whoever is up there. A riddle on the meaning of meaninglessness or vice versa in a devastation-oriented era, with science-fiction figures on the prowl and political-ologies lanced. Spottily effective.

Pub Date: March 18, 1963

ISBN: 038533348X

Page Count: 308

Publisher: Holt Rinehart & Winston

Review Posted Online: Oct. 6, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1963

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