Another great sci fi novel!

star crossingI just finished reading Star Crossing, by Alexis Glynn Latner. It’s the third novel in the Aeon’s Legacy series. I’ll get to the point right away: if you like science fiction, read this book and read the whole series!

The Aeon’s Legacy series tells the story of the slower-than-light colony ship Aeon, setting out from a dying Earth to find a new home for humanity. Because distances in space are so vast, and light is so slow, the colonists mostly make the journey in stasis, or suspended animation. When their first destination proves unworkable as a future home, Aeon sets out on a thousand-year voyage across space, with her precious human cargo back in stasis. While they’re frozen in time, though, the rest of the universe goes on without them. Aeon’s Legacy is a story about 21st century humans encountering a universe vastly changed from the one they left.

Star Crossing is a different kind of book from the first two books of the series. Hurricane Moon, the first book, was very hard science fiction. Downfall Tide, the second, introduced more speculative elements but also ramped up the pace of the action. Now, the third book keeps the action going non-stop, but also stretches the speculative nature of speculative fiction farther than ever before. Energy beings that get into ships electrical systems, something akin to a Bermuda Triangle in space, and more give the protagonists plenty of reason to stretch their skills to the utmost.

What I love about this series is the author’s interest in moral and ethical issues. Some of the protagonists’ actions to save themselves lead to wildly unintended consequences and condemnation from the rest of the human race. Latner is always revealing surprising outcomes of characters’ past actions, and weaving them together in a way that shows the interconnectedness of humanity.

So often in Hollywood and the Big Five publishers, if you see a reference to faith, you can safely assume you’re being set up to see the character as a hypocrite or a villain. Latner is beautifully, refreshingly different. Many if not most of her characters are religious and though their specific beliefs are often very different from mine, no one – from Christians to Wiccans to everything in between – is ever a caricature or a parody. Their faith is a serious part of who they are, and treated with respect. For that, even when I disagree with her, I will always recommend Latner’s books to anyone who will listen.

What I don’t like about this series is that through her characters, the author advocates for some opinions that I don’t share. I know that many folks read my books and my website because I do my best to provide an alternative to the profane, hypersexualized entertainment industry in America; for them I must warn that Star Crossing includes profanity, sexuality that’s definitely present though not explicit, and some politicization of sex and sexuality.

The beautifully constructed world is more than worth averting your eyes a few times, though. The rich, authentic characters and the studious eye for ethics and morality make the whole series, and Star Crossing in particular, books you shouldn’t miss. My advice is to buy them today!

Book Review: Downfall Tide by Alexis Latner

the cover of Downfall Tide
the cover of Downfall Tide
the cover of Downfall Tide

Downfall Tide by Alexis Latner is the sequel to Hurricane Moon, that I reviewed a couple weeks ago. If you liked the first book, you’re going to love this one. The characters you love are back, along with a profound new threat.

In the first novel in this series, colonists from Earth aboard the ship Aeon crossed a thousand years of space and time in stasis, searching for a new home. But the universe did not stand still while they slept. Now, as they struggle to establish a colony on a new world, danger rushes in from a direction no one expected.

This book has the same weaknesses as its predecessor — a bit of language and non-standard theology — and the same strengths as well. The author very deliberately intends her stories to ask questions about religion, and she treats her religious characters with respect. There is none of the typical entertainment industry caricature of Christians here. What’s more, she even manages to inject some wilder elements into the science of the story, while still keeping her hard sci-fi edge.

I loved Downfall Tide. You should read it.

Book Review: Endeavour by Ralph Kern

The cover of Endeavour by Ralph Kern
The cover of Endeavour by Ralph Kern
The cover of Endeavour by Ralph Kern

I’m on a science fiction kick in my reading of late, resulting in a science fiction kick in my reviewing. Most recently, I listened to Endeavour by Ralph Kern as an Audible audiobook. It was a fun story that’s worth checking out, whether you get the audiobook or the e-book.

Before you do, though: the language. Yeah, the author likes his profanity. There are some F-bombs.

On the other hand, there’s relatively little explicit sex, mostly just hints about characters sneaking off together.

The usual speed bumps aside, though, this is a fun yarn about space travel and exploration. The author intends to propose an answer to science’s famous “Fermi paradox.” Paraphrased, that paradox is something like, the universe is huge enough that there almost have to be other intelligent species out there. So why don’t we hear them? Where are they? This novel has a proposed answer, and unless you’re a super-seasoned sci-fi reader, there’s a good chance you haven’t encountered it before.

If you like tales of space exploration, and you can stomach some strong language, check out Endeavour by Ralph Kern

Book Review: Hurricane Moon

The cover of Hurricane Moon
The cover of Hurricane Moon

I’ve been wanting to review Hurricane Moon by Alexis Latner for a while now. It’s a science fiction novel that I stumbled on via some random googling in search of good hard science fiction. I have to say upfront that it’s not typical material for readers of my books. There’s some content regarding sexuality that I wouldn’t have written, and the author’s faith and my faith definitely follow different paths.

That being said, Hurricane Moon is a great, great story — especially if you like hard sci-fi — and it takes religion seriously and has authentically religious characters who are not demeaned.

Hurricane Moon is a tale of humans setting forth in a slower-than-light colony ship in search of a new world. Civilization on earth is falling apart, and the colonists want a new home. Because, at speeds slower than light, the journey will take many many years, most of the colonists make the journey in stasis (most accurately thought of as cryogenically frozen for later revival, rather than hibernation or anything like that). But when they reach the world on which they hoped to live, nothing goes according to plan. The result is an epic journey across time and space that gives the author space to address questions about faith, love, and human life in general.

It’s not true “clean” fiction, but the language and the sexuality really aren’t that bad at all. And the characters, the setting, and the story make it worth the risk. Check out Hurricane Moon!