Reviews and Comments

JayBird76

BigJay@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 11 months ago

I'm a married gay looking to meet new friends in the #LGBT community. I enjoy #photography, #writing, #atheist, #politics, #PlexMedia, #Ubuntu, and #Linux. I love hard sci-fi, dystopian societies, and young adult literature.

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Jack McDevitt: Polaris (2004, Ace Books)

Another Great Book by Jack McDevitt

Polaris is book two in the Alex Benedict series by Jack McDevitt. Unlike the first one, Polaris is narrated by Chase instead of Alex. Alex and Chase risk their lives to uncover the secret of what happened to the passengers and pilot aboard the Polaris some sixty years ago.

After going on a scientific mission to see a star be consumed by a wandering white dwarf, the pilot radios in that they're about to depart for home. The only problem is they never make it. A ship is dispatched to investigate, but upon getting there, they find the Polaris eerily abandoned. Alex and Chase must piece together the clues risking their own lives to solve the mystery once and for all.

I thoroughly enjoyed the book, but I felt it was almost a rehash of Talent for War. It's as if McDevitt used the same formula as the …

reviewed A Talent For War by Jack McDevitt (An Alex Benedict Novel)

Jack McDevitt: A Talent For War (2004, Ace)

What an Incredible Story

A Talent for War, by Jack McDevitt, was published in 1989. It’s the first in the series of books that follow Alex Benedict. The series is set far into the future when mankind has colonized a good portion of the galaxy, and the planets have their own cultures and histories.

Alex is an antiques dealer and the nephew of famed archeologist Gabe Benedict. Gabe has passed away leaving a mystery for Alex to uncover. The adventure leads him to confront an enemy of mankind and the find of a lifetime.

I wasn’t too sure how I’d like this book when I first started reading it. There were a lot of times where the action seemed to drag, but now that I’ve finished reading it, all of the seemingly minor details were quite important. For the story to make sense at the end, the I had to learn about …

reviewed Starhawk by Jack McDevitt (The Academy series(Priscilla Hutchins), #7)

Jack McDevitt: Starhawk (2013, Ace)

Priscilla “Hutch” Hutchins has finally realized her lifelong dream: She’s completed a nerve-bending qualification flight …

Excellent Space Opera!

Starhawk, by Jack McDevitt, was first published in 2013. It’s part of the Prescilla Hutchins stories as a prequel. The story follows Hutch as she qualifies as an interstellar pilot and how she tries to find her way in her career. If you’ve read Engine of the Gods, Chindi, or Omega, you’ll be familiar with Hutch later in her career.

As I read the previously mentioned stores, I wondered about how Prescilla had become Hutch, the revered interstellar pilot. We don’t get much of the story about what happened while she was training, but I think we get a good sense of it from her qualification flight with Jake. The first painful lesson she had to learn was that a good pilot sometimes has to sacrifice himself for the good of everyone else. We also get to see the toll that takes on people who knew and loved the …

George Orwell: Animal Farm (Paperback, 2004, Signet)

George Orwell's timeless and timely allegorical novel—a scathing satire on a downtrodden society’s blind march …

Some animals are more equal than others...

I love George Orwell. This is a beautiful allegory of communism through the eyes of a mid-twentieth century writer. It's not hard to see parallels to our current political situation.

Pat Frank: Alas, Babylon (2005)

A story of a group of people who rely on their own courage and ingenuity …

How would you survive nuclear war?

I read this for the first time while I was in high school during the Cold War. I lived in a town that had a SAC base that also hosted nuclear ordinance. I've read it a few more times as an adult, too. While the story seems dated today, it's not hard to understand the struggles of surviving in a post-nuclear war world.

Salman Rushdie: The Satanic Verses (1997)

The Satanic Verses is the fourth novel of British-Indian writer Salman Rushdie. First published in …

It's not a bad read

I read this a number of years ago. I didn't fully understand it at the time, but I've had a lot of time to digest it. It's a critique on Islam and not always favorable.

Arthur C. Clarke: 2010 (1997, Ballantine Books)

When 2001: A Space Odyssey first shocked, amazed, and delighted millions in the late 1960s, …

Review of '2010' on 'Goodreads'

2010: Odyssey Two is the second book in the Dave Bowman/HAL 9000 series. While the books in the series are considered sequels, the timeline and story change a little due to historical events and discoveries in the real world.

Dr. Haywood Floyd embarks on a journey to Jupiter to recover the Discovery and investigate “Big Brother”, another monolith found at the LaGrange point between IO and Jupiter. He’s joined by Dr. Chandra, HAL’s designer, and Walter Curnow, the chief engineer who oversaw the construction of the Discovery. They’ve hitched a ride with the Russians on the Alexi Leonov because they needed a quick departure due to the decay of Discovery’s orbit.

This book was written in 1982 and the movie was produced in 1984. The movie follows the book for the most part. As usual, the book has more details than the movie. I love the movie just as much …