Review: The Terrans by Jean Johnson

terrans by jean johnsonFormat read: ebook provided by the publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genre: science fiction
Series: First Salik War #1
Length: 464 pages
Publisher: Ace
Date Released: July 28, 2015
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Jean Johnson’s first novel in an explosive new science fiction trilogy set in the world of the national bestselling Theirs Not to Reason Why series—set two-hundred years earlier, at the dawn of the First Salik War…

Born into a political family and gifted with psychic abilities, Jacaranda MacKenzie has served as a border-watcher and even spent time as a representative on the United Planets Council. Now she just wants to spend her days in peace and quiet as a translator—but the universe has other plans…

Humans have long known that they would encounter more alien species, and while those with precognitive abilities agree a terrible war is coming, they do not agree on who will save humanity—a psychic soldier or a politician.

But Jackie is both.

After she is pressured into rejoining the Space Force to forestall the impending calamity, Jackie makes an unsettling discovery. Their new enemy, the Salik, seem to be rather familiar with fighting Humans—as if their war against humanity had already begun…

My Review:

I picked Terrans up at lunch Thursday, and became so absorbed that I felt compelled to finish it. Compelled as in read until 4 am, get up and finish immediately. That kind of compelled. I couldn’t put it down, and almost didn’t go to sleep.

soldiers duty mediumFor anyone who has read Johnson’s Those Not to Reason Why series (start with A Soldier’s Duty (reviewed here) and start NOW!) this book is a prequel series. In her Those Not series the Terran United Planets are in the middle of a devastating and centuries long war. In The Terrans, we see the beginning of that conflict, and it will keep space opera and military SF fans on the edge of their seats.

I’m including military SF fans, even though The Terrans is not strictly a war story. This is a first contact story. It’s a different version of first contact, where the humans discover that they are on both sides of the contact, and that their various branches have more to offer each other, and more mess to get involved in, than anyone expected.

The ship Aloha 9 meets the V’Dan for the first time. And to paraphrase Walt Kelly in Pogo, “we have met the aliens, and they are us”. Because the V’Dan are definitely an unexpected offshoot of the human race. 10,000 of their, and our, years ago, a religious figure scooped their ancestors from Earth and deposited them on V’Dan.

It is just possible that the ancestor in question was actually Ia from Theirs Not playing with time and space, but we don’t know and it doesn’t actually matter at this point. But it is interesting speculation.

We meet the V’Dan because the last remaining members of a V’Dan warship are imprisoned by the Salik, who intended to eat them for dinner. I do mean eat for dinner and not have them over for dinner. The Salik, as established in Those Not, are cannibals who prefer that their food be live, sentient and struggling.

The rescue goes off without too many hitches, because the Terrans’ Ambassador for anyone they might meet is aboard the Aloha 9. Jackie MacKenzie is psi, and is telepathic, xenopathic and capable of telekinesis. She can not only read enough of the Salik thoughts to be positive about their dietary practices, but she can communicate with the surviving V’Dan captain well enough to enlist his aid in freeing his crew.

And that’s where the fun begins.

Captain Le’ith of the V’Dan is also psi, but very untrained. His rapport with Jackie from the instant they meet helps his crew adjust, and gives Jackie a far greater insight into the V’Dan than anyone might have expected.

It is not all smooth sailing. There is a psi-hating bigot among the Terran crew, and an equally xenophobic and obstinate civilian power-grabber on the V’Dan side. Neither of these idjits can see past the nose on their unreasonably prejudiced faces.

There is also a cultural roadblock. The V’Dan show that they are mature adults by developing a pattern of colors and spots during late puberty. It’s a virus that has become part of their DNA. They consider any V’Dan without those marks to be children. We Terran humans are the progenitors of the V’Dan people, but we don’t have those marks. The cultural misunderstandings abound, and have the potential to derail any possible alliance.

That’s if the surprising relationship between the captain and the ambassador doesn’t send everything to hell out an airlock first.

Escape Rating A+: The Terrans is both a very political story and a very personal one. Jackie Mackenzie, as an ambassador, former councilor (think senator), and re-instated military officer, provides the reader a way into the way that Earth works in the 23rd century. She’s been a politician, a civil servant, and a middle-ranking warrior. She’s seen a lot and done a lot. She is also a high-ranked, in the capability sense, psi, so she is able to show the reader how psi powers are used, regulated and received in a world that knows that some people are weapons.

What they don’t know is why psi powers suddenly started manifesting in the previous two centuries. The have the capability of measuring them, but they don’t know how they were created in the first place.

While I have my suspicions because I read the first series, I don’t know. And the capacity to guess or not has no bearing on enjoying this book without having read Those Not. But again, why would you?

A lot of this story revolves around the politics and procedures surrounding first contact. There is a lot of security and medical procedures. We have to be exposed to each others’ bugs and find ways to prevent epidemics on both sides. There is clear evidence that we’ve learned from our history.

But the big issues are political. And even though politics and process can be tedious, in this book they simply are not. The future world that the author has envisioned is one that mostly works, while at the same time it provides commentary on what has been learned from our history and ways that things could be done better. People have mostly gotten better, if only because they have learned from our deadly mistakes.

By introducing the V’Dan to our world, it gives the author a plausible and excellently used reason to explain 23rd century Earth to them, and therefore to us as well.

But as the story progresses, it also becomes a story about individuals. Not just Jackie and Le’ith, but also both crews and a few of the civil servants (politician is a pejorative term) who get close to the center of their storm.

One of the things I enjoyed very much is that, in spite of the way that Terran humans appear to the V’Dan, both Jackie and Le’ith are well into adulthood. They are both in their mid-30s, and have significant life-experience under their belts. So while they will lead a universe altering change for their peoples, this is NOT a coming of age story. And I’m glad of it. I found Jackie to be a woman I could both identify with and aspire to.

I’ve never made a secret of having loved the entire first series from beginning to end, as well as Johnson’s fantasy series and even her fanfiction. If you have any interest in space opera and/or epic science fiction, Theirs Not to Reason Why and The Salik War are well worth losing yourself in.

Vdan by jean johnsonThe second book of the Salik War, The V’Dan, is scheduled for release in January 2016. I will be haunting NetGalley until it appears.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Silver Mirrors by A.A. Aguirre

silver mirrors by aa aguirreFormat read: ebook borrowed from the library
Formats available: ebook, paperback, mass market paperback
Genre: Steampunk
Series: Apparatus Infernum, #2
Length: 337 pages
Publisher: Ace
Date Released: April 29, 2014
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

As powerful magic comes creeping back, dangerous days are dawning…

Criminal Investigation Division inspectors Janus Mikani and Celeste Ritsuko were lucky to make it out of their last mission alive. Since then, strange troubles have plagued the city of steam and shadows, apparently as a result of magic released during the CID inspectors’ desperate interruption of an ancient ritual. The fabric of the world has been unsettled, and the Council has assigned Mikani and Ritsuko to investigate.

They soon discover that matters are worse than they imagined. Machines have developed minds of their own, cragger pirates are raiding the seas with relentless aggression, and mad elementals are running amok. As the chaos builds to a crescendo, Mikani and Ritsuko must fight a war on two fronts—and this time, they may not be able to turn the deadly tide…

My Review:

Bronze Gods by A.A. AguirreI absolutely adored Bronze Gods (reviewed here) the first book in the Apparatus Infernum series. While I certainly enjoyed Silver Mirrors, it didn’t grab me quite as much. I loved the magical whodunnit aspects of the first book, so this story lost focus for me when the authors took their city detectives out of the city and sent them on a pirate adventure.

The fish were a little bit too far out of water, pun definitely intended.

It’s not that Ritsuko and Mikani don’t make interesting adventurers, they do. But the scope of the adventure took them out of their place, and I wasn’t done exploring the city yet. Also, Silver Mirrors is a very direct sequel to Bronze Gods, and while I loved that book, it’s been a year and I don’t recall every detail. Which would have helped.

On the other hand, Silver Mirrors has some great lines, like: “Nobody ever tells you that adventures are exhausting, messy, and inconvenient.” Which this adventure certainly is for all the parties involved.

The story begins because the underground trains are screaming. I don’t mean the brakes, I mean the actual trains themselves. Sort of like having your car start telling you how depressed it is, only very, very loudly.

There are two things going on; 1) all the steampowered and magically powered technology in this world is powered by elemental spirits, and something has made those spirits unhappy. 2) the arcane ritual that Ritsuko and Mikani broke up in Bronze Gods wasn’t exactly completed cleanly, so there’s a mess of arcane energy floating around and looking for trouble.

Which both does and doesn’t explain everything. Our investigators are sure that there’s a connection, but by the time everyone agrees to that premise, the trouble is so bad that they have to go to the ends of the earth to solve the problem at its heart.

And that’s how the pirates come into the adventure. Only pirates are willing to go someplace where the elemental laws have gone topsy turvy, and only if there’s enough profit in it. In this case, the profit being that Mikani owes the pirate queen a really big favor.

Then there’s the politics, which are even deadlier than the elementals gone mad. Even in the midst of utter chaos, there is always someone more than willing to use the chaos for their own ends–no matter how many corpses they leave in their wake.

Escape Rating B: I enjoyed Silver Mirrors, but not nearly as much as Bronze Gods. There may have been one too many plots upon plots in the political aspects of the story. Also, the whole “elementals gone mad” part of the story didn’t quite grab me. That the people of Hy Braesil have based their entire technology on enslaving elemental spirits but were unaware of it twiggedmy suspension of belief meter.

The development of the relationship between Mikani and Ritsuko is fascinating. They are partners, but the depth of their partnership surprises even them. It’s clear that they love each other, but they have become so enmeshed in each other’s lives that they are completely afraid to say anything about what they feel. And yet, their partnership is utterly rock solid. They practically need each other to keep going. I hope that the authors can keep their relationship growing and changing without falling into romance too fast. Watching them teeter is terrific!

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Hellfire by Jean Johnson

Hellfire by Jean JohnsonFormat read: ebook purchased from Amazon; paperback purchased at Worldcon
Formats available: ebook, paperback, mass market paperback
Genre: Military science fiction
Series: Theirs Not to Reason Why, #3
Length: 479 pages
Publisher: Ace
Date Released: July 30, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

As captain, Ia must now assemble a crew that can rise to the ultimate challenge of saving the galaxy. The hardest part will be getting them to believe her, to trust in her prophecies. If they don’t, her own crew will end up being the biggest obstacle in her race against time.

The Salik are breaking through the Blockade, plunging the known galaxy into war. Ia cannot stop it this time, nor does she want to. This is the terrible price she has seen all along—that some must pay with their lives so that others might live. Now only time itself can prove whether each member of her crew is merely a soldier or truly one of Ia’s Damned.

My Review:

Damn if this isn’t a middle book. It’s a damned good middle book, but it is definitely a middle book, suffering from all of the attendant problems of a member of that dreaded breed. You need to have read the previous books in the Theirs Not to Reason Why series (A Soldier’s Duty, reviewed here and An Officer’s Duty) and you need to wait impatiently for the next and hopefully finally book in the series, Damnation, to be published, probably next summer.

It’s going to be a hellishly long wait.

Ia is finally the Captain of her own ship, the Terran United Peacekeepers Space Force (TUPSF) Hellfire. Her crew will come to be infamously known as Ia’s Damned. She knows exactly when and in what circumstances they will acquire that nickname because Ia is a massive precognitive. Her coming has been foretold by one interplanetary religion as The Prophet of a Thousand Years. Ia has only one purpose in her life; to save the existence of all sentient races from an invasion that will wipe them from the galaxy, 300 years in the future.

She walks the timeplains, always seeking the one and only one choice that has a dim chance of success. For her people. For all “people”.

By the point where she takes over the Captaincy of the Hellfire, she has revealed herself to her superior officers in the TUPSF and to her crew. Forces have aligned themselves against her; not because they oppose her ultimate purpose, but because they are playing a game, and can’t believe that Ia is playing for such high stakes that their game will be rendered meaningless.

Hellfire is a book about the hurry up and wait involved in waging a long, slow war…because there is an enemy who comes before the ultimate enemy, and Ia has to defeat them first, so that the TUPSF still has something left when the dark days come.

It turns out that even a massive precog cannot account for all the possible chances.

Escape Rating A-: Notice that in the “format read” section above I have both an ebook copy that I purchased and I bought a paperback at WorldCon just so I could get the author to sign it. This probably gives a hint on my thoughts about the series as a whole.

Ia is a fascinating character. She knows everything, and yet, sometimes she still can’t control everything, which becomes the central tension in this story. She may see all events, but she can still be tripped up by her physical limitations. She can only be in one place at one time.

The story drags on in the middle by the need to describe the military logistics of the “hurry up and wait” wear and tear of a long campaign. It’s a necessary part of the story but it just wasn’t as interesting to this reader as focusing on the human (or Gatsugi, or any other sentient) aspects of the story.

The parts that sing for me were the times when the focus closes in on specific actions. The early scene where Ia returns to her homeworld of Sanctuary and gets to seriously tweak the nose of the religious zealot bureaucracy was much too much fun.

Near the end, there is a scene that should bring tears to any sentient. The aftermath of the scene explains much about the price that Ia pays for her knowledge and power. It’s about page 339 in either the paperback or ebook.

Ia’s story is definitely being sent into the light. Read it and you’ll be enthralled into understanding.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money or borrowed from a public library and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.

Review: Bronze Gods by A.A. Aguirre

Bronze Gods by A.A. AguirreFormat read: print book borrowed from the Library
Formats available: ebook, mass market paperback
Genre: Steampunk fantasy
Series: Apparatus Infernum, #1
Length: 336 pages
Publisher: Ace
Date Released: April 30, 2013
Purchasing Info: Author’s Website, Publisher’s Website, Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Book Depository

Danger stalks the city of steam and shadows.

Janus Mikani and Celeste Ritsuko work all hours in the Criminal Investigation Division, keeping citizens safe. He’s a charming rogue with an uncanny sixth sense; she’s all logic–and the first female inspector. Between his instincts and her brains, they collar more criminals than any other partnership in the CID.

Then they’re assigned a potentially volatile case where one misstep could end their careers. At first, the search for a missing heiress seems straightforward, but when the girl is found murdered–her body charred to cinders–Mikani and Ritsuko’s modus operandi will be challenged as never before. Before long, it’s clear the bogeyman has stepped out of nightmares to stalk gaslit streets, and it’s up to them to hunt him down. There’s a madman on the loose, weaving blood and magic in an intricate, lethal ritual that could mean the end of everything…

My Review:

Cops, machinery, and old fey magic make for a stunning combination in this first story in A.A. Aguirre’s Apparatus Infernum series.

When someone says “Bronze Gods”, it’s a curse. Mikani and Ritsuko, well, Mikani anyway, say it rather a lot in the course of the investigations that make up this story. They have a lot to curse about, and not just because they’re detective partners on the night shift at the Criminal Investigation Division.

Janus Mikani does too much of his investigation by magic for it be comfortable. Literally. When he opens himself up to the energies in a crime scene, he leaves with plenty of evidence, but also a killer migraine and bleeding from some orifice. Celeste Ritsuko sifts the tangible evidence, and deals with the details and the witnesses Mikani pisses off.

Mikani occasionally roughs up any detectives who believe that women like Ritsuko don’t belong in the CID. Their partnership works pretty well. After three years, they communicate without saying a word. I don’t mean telepathy, not exactly, more the nuances of body language between two people who work together extremely well.

Then someone starts murdering young women. Women from upper-class families who have chosen to step outside their family protection and family compounds for a little freedom. Women who are breaking pattern just a bit, but nothing wild or criminal. Women with very influential families.

They are being murdered by means of incredibly complicated ritualistic magic. The questions are legion. Why these particular women? What connects them? What does the murderer hope to gain?

And can Mikani and Ritsuko catch the killer before he claims another victim? And before he completes whatever and wherever his infernal devices and desires are leading?

Escape Rating A: There were layers within layers within layers, and every single one was necessary to make this magical steampunk clockwork run. It is a grimly beautiful piece of worldbuilding.

Dorstaad’s ancient backstory is glimpsed in the prologue, and that depth is important. It also invokes a marvelous piece of myth. Hy Breasil is from Irish folklore, so we feel this place is familiar, even as the story moves to the more contemporary setting. We know in our hearts who the Ferisher and the Iron Folk will be, even if we don’t know where this story will take us.

Dorstaad is a world where big magic has been made to go away, although some people still have enough Ferisher in them to be able to do some smaller magic. Magic, and magical people, are fading.

On top of that, we have machinery. Guns and gears and trams and trains. As the magic fades, steampower is taking over. But the rich still have elementals to perform magical tasks.

And in the middle of it all, we have the story of a partnership. Two cops needing to solve a terrible crime. Mikani and Ritsuko are utterly fascinating. She’s the one who is by-the-book, because she’s living in a time/place where a woman has to be twice as good as a man to be thought his equal. Mikani does it all by his sixth-sense. A part of that sense tells him he needs Ritsuko in his life. Her cop instincts tell her she needs him in hers, but that she’ll keep him there a lot longer if she makes sure their relationship stays on the work side of the line.

But they aren’t complete without each other, and they are at their best together. They have to be their best to catch this killer, because he is way more than human. And also much less.

Bronze Gods was one of those books that I was sorry to see end. Like the best urban fantasy, although the case was resolved, there are loose ends, and I’m grateful. I want to read more of Mikani and Ritsuko’s adventures. There are definitely more stories to tell.

***FTC Disclaimer: Most books reviewed on this site have been provided free of charge by the publisher, author or publicist. Some books we have purchased with our own money and will be noted as such. Any links to places to purchase books are provided as a convenience, and do not serve as an endorsement by this blog. All reviews are the true and honest opinion of the blogger reviewing the book. The method of acquiring the book does not have a bearing on the content of the review.