Showing posts with label Sci Fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sci Fi. Show all posts

Sunday, January 7, 2018

Book Review: Artemis by Andy Weir

**I was given a digital copy in exchange for an honest review**

I went in thinking this would be science fiction. I mean, she lives on the Moon!!! Artemis is the name of the city and the main character is Jazz.

There is so much substance to this book, and it's all told from Jazz's perspective.

It has sci-fi elements to it. Like we aren't really to the Moon city thing yet, and Andy throws in lots of science. I can't verify what's true, but it was fun.

Jazz is a really diverse character on her own. She's kind of a pain in the rear, she admits to that. But she has a big heart and is fiercely loyal.

It's not my kind of book, but I really enjoyed myself. I felt like it had a lot of action with the occasional drag. It really picks up in the last half, with lots of surprises.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Book Review: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep

This winter I watched this series on Netflix called "Prophets of Science Fiction" which had a handful of episodes dedicated to the top Science Fiction authors and how their fiction is moving closer to being true. Philip K. Dick was one of them. I'd never heard of him before, but he was fascinating. Guy was into psychedelic drugs and made a habit out of paranoia. But they said what a brilliant writer he was.

Well I love a good Sci Fi book, so I hit up Kindle to see if any of his work was free. BTW - there are a bunch of short stories out there for free. It's good to test drive a new author when his books are around $7 a copy. My library had this both physical and a digital copy to check out.

Anyway, he's a B science fiction author. It borders on trashy. But the kind of trashy that you just can't put down. Turns out this is the book basis for the cult classic Blade Runner (which I've never seen). I will say this, the man weaves a story like it's nothing. I think that's one of the problems people had with the movie, it was hard to follow the plot. Likewise in this story. But if you just go with it, it kind of makes an illogical kind of sense. You really don't know what's going on, because you aren't supposed to. The main character can't even figure it out!

It makes for a story that can change each time you read it. So, do I recommend this story? Yeah! 5-stars.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Geust Post: Setting the Story

Guest Post written by Jessica E. Subject

Thank you very much for hosting me on Jacob’s Beloved Books today.

In Crash Landing, setting played an important role for many reasons. To begin with, Cael crash lands on Earth. He’s an alien. And you know as well as I do how often there are reports of UFOs. So, I had to set the story in a secluded area where not a lot of people would notice a ball of light falling from the sky. I also had to set it near water. Why? Not only is the lake where Cael’s ship crashes, but the water is necessary for another character in the story.

And with the building Cael wakes up inside, I wanted it to be cozy and welcoming rather than cold and sterile. Why? Because if I were an alien traveling to a new planet and woke up somewhere, I’d want it to be some place comfortable rather than a room where I’d expect those who found me to do experiments on me. I didn’t want Cael to have the urge to run as soon as he regained consciousness. I wanted him to be curious about those who rescued him.

So, for Crash Landing, I set the story in a cabin in the wood that is also on a lake. It works for the story, and it’s a place that personally makes me comfortable.

Tell me: Where is the one place that always makes you comfortable?

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

Synopsis:
As his ship plummets toward Earth, Cael believes his life to be over. His last ditch effort to save himself ends in a fiery crash. When he wakes up, he believes he’s entered the afterlife, but his surroundings indicate otherwise. He made it to Earth. But who saved him, and what do they want with him?

About Jessica E. Subject
Jessica Subject started writing to encourage her daughter to read. Now she writes to keep herself grounded. Although she reads many genres, she enjoys writing Science Fiction Romance the most and believes everyone in the universe deserves a happily ever after. She lives Southwestern Ontario, Canada with her husband and two kids and loves to hear from anyone who has enjoyed her stories.
Website / Twitter / Facebook / Amazon Author Page

Excerpt:
Cael gripped the cushioned arms of the captain’s chair as his ship tumbled bow over stern. The console flashed a blinding red in front of him. Piercing alarms drilled into his mind and he lost focus. The seconds raced by as he plummeted toward Earth. He’d fucked up this mission of peace. Contact with his home planet had ended months ago. No one from Narien could save him now. His death was imminent.

The water below wouldn’t soften his landing. At its current speed, his ship would disintegrate on splashdown. The planet’s gravity pulled him down faster.

He coughed; the acrid scent of fried electronics stung his nose and the back of his throat. Please let my death be quick.

A rattling to the left caught his attention above all other noise. The handle on the cabin door shook. Freedom. It wasn’t his time to die, if he could get out.

The altimeter on the dashboard read six thousand meters, high enough to jump and land safely with his chute. Only to land in frigid water and die of exhaustion or hypothermia from treading without any hope of a rescue.

“Shit.” But he’d die if he stayed. He had to take the chance. Yanking off his safety harness, he pulled himself to standing and strained to reach the recess where his pack hung. Stretching up, he fingered the cloth strap. Not close enough to grab hold of it.

The ship jolted and flung him to the stern. He weaved his arm through the straps of the pack on his way past, dislodging it from the hook. Yes.

His triumph was short-lived as he flew starboard, smashing his shoulder against the wall. He groaned when an electrifying spasm shot down his arm to the tips of his fingers. The ship lurched again, and he tumbled back toward the console. He grabbed the door, his feet dangling in mid air. If he didn’t get out now, he’d forfeit any chance to survive.

The ship righted again. He planted his feet against the bottom of the door and twisted the crank. The latch snapped open, filling him with a sense of hope. Careful to keep at least one hand on the handle at all times, he slung the pack over his shoulders.

All set. Time to jump. Pushing off the floor, he slammed his uninjured shoulder against the door. It blew open and tore away from its hinges, lost to the sky.

Cael teetered on the edge before plunging out of his failing ship. Wind whipped all around him as he twisted to catch his bearing during freefall.

Glancing down, he spied crystal blue lake, much closer than he’d expected. Too close.

He jerked the cord on his chute–several hundred feet lower than he should have. At least. His feet skimmed the cold waves just as his chute caught the current and heaved him back into the air.

The ship splashed into the water beside him, disintegrating into millions of pieces. He raised his hands in front of his face as shrapnel flew at him. Tiny shards sliced into his arms and legs, but the extreme heat from the cloud of steam billowing up at him stung the most.

From the moment his toes touched down in the once frigid water, his skin sizzled. He screamed in agony. His death would have been quicker and less agonizing if he’d remained in the ship.

A hard piece of his spacecraft smashed down on his head, and he welcomed the darkness.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Book Review: Dark Cell

by: Samantha Curtin

Available at Amazon

Synopsis:
After being wrongly imprisoned for the murder of two Gorgan children, a Crizenian by the name of Ness is broken out by two teenage boys. The boys then embark on a fantastical journey full of magic, suspense and corruption to prove Ness' innocence.

This is the first published work by my friend Samantha Curtin. I was excited to read this, because I follow her blog and she's a good writer. If you check out her blog, she writes about numerous topics from an Anthropological perspective. She's one smart cookie!

She is a good story teller, and her characters are lively. I really liked the boy whose uncle was housing Ness. He was smart, but more importantly he cared about doing the right thing. That was lacking by everyone else in the world Sam created.

The story captured my imagination and I had to read from beginning to the end. I cared about the boys and Ness, and hated the world he was trapped in. I thought it was a great view of our own modern legal system, where real justice is hard to find.

There is room for improvement. I think Sam needs to slow down and add more details. Especially in the courtroom scene, it moved entirely too fast for the importance of what was going on.

Also, you'll find some typos but not too many considering she published this on her own.

All that being said, I think it was entertaining and I can't wait to read her next story. She has raw talent that I look forward to watching it improve.


Monday, May 28, 2012

Guest Blog: Unintended Consequences

Guest Blog by: S. Evan Townsend

I'm a fairly straight-forward writer. I don't weave in complex subplots or subtle motivations for my characters. My heroes are generally good and my villains may think they are doing good but they either use poor methods or have bad motivations.

So sometimes I am amazed at what readers see in my book that I didn't mean to be there. I really think this is projecting their experiences on my writing, which is not a bad thing. Each of us sees something slightly different when we gaze upon the Mona Lisa. Me, I still haven't figured out what's so great about it. But people see different things than I intended. Again, this isn't bad, and art is supposed to mean different things to different people.

For example, in my latest novel, Rock Killer, a company called Space Resources, Inc. (SRI), mines asteroids for the resources a crowded planet needs without degrading Earth's environment. One of my main characters, Alex Chun, works in a job where he's gone from Earth for six months mining asteroids, comes home for two weeks, then leaves again for space. He's married so he only sees his wife during those two weeks on Earth. One reader asked me, "Why does he leave his wife in preference for Space Resources, Inc.?" There is a scene early in the novel where his wife asks why he doesn't quit his job and stay on Earth permanently:

"You could quit SRI," Kirsten speculated. "Join my life full time. You've met most of my friends and get along with most of them. You have enough money in your SRI account we could both retire."

Alex shook his head. "I can't. I mean, I can, but I won't. I owe SRI. They took me and educated me and gave me a job–and kept educating me."

Alex doesn't leave his wife, as in divorce her. They are both very much in love. But he does not quit and he goes off to the asteroid belt to mine another asteroid. He's like the whalers and sailors of old, doing his job, his duty, even though it takes him away from his wife whom he loves. The modern equivalent would be the military personnel who get deployed to Afghanistan for a year.

But I never thought about Alex making a choice between his wife, Kirsten, and his job. Kirsten is independent enough that she doesn't need a man around full time. Their marriage works for them. But this reader saw conflict where I didn't mean for there to be any. Which may tell us more about her than about me.

One reason I love to write is so I can share things with readers, sneak in stuff while they are being entertained. But it's the stuff my readers sneak in that I never intended that is interesting to me.

Website / Facebook / Twitter / Trailer

Amazon / Barnes & Noble



Thursday, April 19, 2012

The Goblin Rebellion

by: Rex Jameson

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

Synopsis:
Five years after the Uldram catastrophe, the elf Routan sits in a shattered home filled with the faded memories of his murdered children. King Elandril has done nothing to bring Lucifer and the demons to justice, and despite the assurances of the government, Routan remains convinced that the Elven Realm is in grave danger. Assistance comes from the creator of the Order Primal, and together, he and Routan will shake the foundations of the multiverse.

Length: 95,000 words (approx. 392 pages in print)

The Goblin Rebellion is the sequel to Lucifer's Odyssey and the second book in the Primal Patterns series.


This is a guy novel. Not to say that women can't enjoy it, I did. But this one guys will get too. There is so much talk of primal patterns and shadows and universe stuff...honestly it's hard to wrap my head around most of it. But that being said, it doesn't take away from the story. Even though I don't get it, it adds validity to what the characters are doing. Their magic is drawn from their primal pattern.

Well if you want to read this one, I recommend you get Lucifer's Odyssey first. That story goes from Lucifer (Prince of the Chaos primal) being trapped on Earth in the Order primal. He does finally escape and then a whole mess of exciting stuff happens.

I will say one thing, these books keep you on the edge of your seat no matter what is going on. Lucifer isn't the bad guy either, he's the good guy and Jehova - Lucifer's cousin is the bad guy. Jehova is a tinkerer and he left Chaos to create his own primal pattern. Did I mention he's kind of a jerk? He thinks his work is of the utmost importance and will stop at nothing to continue it. That includes taking out another primal pattern. In the first book he tries attacking the Chaos primal, since that didn't work he's back trying to take out the Elvin primal.

And that's all I'm telling you. It's only $2.99 for the e-book at Amazon and really that's a HUGE bargain considering how long and jammed full of excitement it is.

Monday, January 16, 2012

My Planet or Yours

by: L.C. Evans

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

Synopsis:
Nora Bryant is a single Earth woman out to ban men from her life after a recent breakup. Triskam is a strikingly handsome extraterrestrial, who crash lands near her remote Arizona home. Add to this mix, a couple of misguided thugs looking for a gold rush, an overly friendly, not-so-guard dog, and a communications device that thinks it's a nanny, and you have My Planet or Yours?, a delightful new romantic comedy by LC Evans, author of the Kindle bestseller, We Interrupt This Date.

I was planning to review this book and We Interrupt This Date, because I knew I had that one to review. LOL - I already reviewed it. I will be reposting that review this week, though. I did purchase this book for my Nook to pump up her sales. L.C. Evans passed away this last week. She was a great writer and deserves it.

Now onto the review. The cover is cartoonish, honestly I love all these cartoon covers. I think they are cute and so much less serious than the ones using real people. I especially love the dog. In the story, Nora adopts Chance just before he was put down. He was supposed to be her guard dog, since she was back to living alone. Chance is not a guard dog...he's a lover, happy to see anyone.

When she gets back home she finds Triskam hiding in her shed, and as they are talking in her kitchen, some real bad guys show up. Nothing like getting held hostage to really bring people together. There was amazing chemistry between them from the beginning. Really from the moment Triskam laid eyes on her.

Since Nora had recently broken up, her friends weren't real supportive of her "dating" a new guy. But really, it was too late to spare her feelings...I think her friends should have minded their own business.

Minimal mistakes in this one - I love seeing that in the indie books. Plus L.C. Evans seems to write whatever she damn well pleases. This book has similar flow to We Interrupt This Date, but the characters and location and even the plot are all unique. She does write, strong and independent women...even if the women don't realize they are.

This book has about 469 pages, and I read it in a day. Can we say very fast pace? I started it on Saturday and finished early Sunday morning before I went to work. I would encourage anyone who likes romance with some humor thrown in to get this book...and I'm someone who doesn't really like romance as a genre.

And to honor L.C. Evans, to thank her spirit for sharing such warm stories...I'm going to buy one of you readers your very own copy of My Planet or Yours OR We Interrupt This Date. Just leave a comment on this blog for your entry. And the usual - grab my button and blog about this giveaway/review to get extra entries. Good luck! I'll draw the winner on Friday (Jan 20, 2012).

Monday, September 19, 2011

Convergence

by: Joseph Gellene

Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Smashwords.

Synopsis:
How do you stop a killer who remembers everything you're about to do?

John Smith greatly enjoys his unusual life. He's wealthy, long-lived, and very well traveled. He jumps to the 21st century expecting to be reunited with his daughter but finds she has been brutally murdered. Under normal circumstances it was a simple matter to undo an untimely death but, in this case, the killer remembers multiple fact patterns and easily thwarts John's attempts. To save his daughter, John must overcome shifting fact patterns, a determined detective, and three versions of the killer. His research shows that he fails, but facts can be fluid.


This book is The Time Traveler's Wife and The Matrix all rolled into one. It's full of suspense and action and lots of different "fact patterns" due to numerous "fact shifts". The way it is supposed to work is there are people who go from birth to death with no jumping around, they are called linears. Then there are people who jump all over the place through infinite possibilities and probabilities. Toss in some physics - ok I really don't fully understand it but in the story it does make sense.

When the people who jump around...the Ordinals...and enter a new fact pattern, they generally forget anything else. They only know what is real where they are at. It saves their sanity. A few people can remember it all, all the shifts and possibilities, and these people wind up insane - there just isn't any other way.

The plot? An older Ordinal named John Smith finds his daughter murdered and while avoiding run ins with the police finds an abandoned little girl who is a new ordinal. He takes her back to his safe house where she is cared for by the caretakers. As an adult she is back to exact revenge against the man who murdered her parents...whoever that is. Then there is the police officer, a rookie who meets up with - or has a convergence - with his older and much older selves.

Criticism? Like the Time Travelers Wife, it gets hard to follow when all the characters and the facts of the story are shifting, it constantly changes throughout the story, and really kicks up toward the end.

You get to know the characters just enough. I'd have loved more background information on John Smith and Parker, two central characters that just don't get enough history or personality into the story.

That being said, I enjoyed the story. I had a hard time getting started, but by the time I reached the end I couldn't put it down. It's a great story if you can keep the facts straight. But don't feel bad if you can't, sometimes the characters couldn't either. lol

Friday, September 2, 2011

Backlash - a novelette

by: Nancy Fulda

Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Smashwords.

Synopsis:
Eugene Gutierez lost his wife, his pride, and part of his sanity during an undercover anti-terrorist operation in South America. Now, he's about to be recruited by operatives from the future; and they're not going to let him say no. Originally published in Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, this novelette was listed in Tangent Online's 2010 recommended reading list. About 11,000 words.

This is a super fast sci-fi thriller, containing only 31 pages. I read it in a few hours...it would take less without kids. lol

Eugene gets pulled into a black op from the future, forcing him to be a very quick study - he wasn't even supposed to be aware but the constant flashbacks he suffers from prevents the science from working properly.

Add to this finding out his daughter is part of a terrorist group, his world is thrown upside down in a matter of minutes. And he must recover from all this and do the job he volunteered for...well his future self volunteered.

As I said, very fast read. Great descriptions. I got lost in the tech-heavy description of the time-travel, very physics based. But even though I couldn't understand that part, it doesn't really take away from the story. She does try to explain it deeper, but it was still Greek to me.

If you like action packed sci-fi, you'll love this short story. I enjoyed the story, but I think it was too short and too scientific for my tastes. Alas, I can only give this 3 stars. And yes, I would chance other works by this author. She is a very good writer.
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