Reviews tagging 'Car accident'

Assassin's Orbit by John Appel

2 reviews

azrah786's review against another edition

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3.5

 **I was provided with an ARC through the publisher in exchange for an honest review**

CW: violence, gun violence, mass murder, blood, gore, death, vomiting, vehicle accident

Assassin’s Orbit begins with the discovery of a mass murder on a space station which sets up an action-packed investigation with a police chief on the station, a private investigator with personal connections to one of the victims, and an external government spy joining forces to get to the bottom of the situation.

Now the synopsis and opening alludes the story to be a murder mystery but this was very much a suspenseful sci-fi thriller packed with political tensions and action every other page - less of a “who dunnit” and more of a chase to see what was going to happen next.

I enjoyed the worldbuilding, predominantly the technology and discovering the history of this future universe Appel has imagined. It was also really refreshing to see that the leading protagonists were all middle aged!

The action was incredibly written (albeit sometimes the terminology threw me and can be pretty much summed up by this quote from the book – “One truism of space combat is that everyone can see what’s going on, but very few can understand what’s happening.”) but I did feel that because the action was genuinely non-stop it made the plot drag out a little too much. Furthermore there was less attention to individual characters and their development too so they started to fall a little flat for me by the end. And the sheer number of characters that were in this story and the fact there was so much alternation between their forenames or surnames being used depending on who was narrating got a little confusing as well.

All in all though this was an entertaining read and having enjoyed the overarching story and the writing I look forward to reading what Appel puts out next!
Final Rating – 3.5/5 Stars 

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mar's review against another edition

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adventurous fast-paced

2.25

Okay, first, the diversity in this book was absolutely lovely, it was the most inclusive book I've read in a while and it's clear the author put a lot of effort into it. The main cast is made up entirely of older women, which was so refreshing to see, there's lots of characters of color, LGBT characters, etc, etc. Some highlights for me included:

- the blind main character who uses a cane and assistive technology - I love to see sci-fi stories explore how technology can accommodate disabled people instead of erasing/"fixing" them :')
- multiple (though minor) characters using ze/zem pronouns (you don't see humans using neopronouns in sci-fi often, nice), and also the use of M. as a gender neutral alternative to Mr./Mrs./Ms. aka top 10 things that make you go omg can we please implement this into the real world right now immediately. Like as as a nonbinary person who doesn't really like Mx.? Totally filed that away in my brain for future reference.
- Muslim characters! (I can count the number of Muslim characters I've encountered in science fiction on one hand, so that's something that really stood out to me, though as I'm not Muslim I can't vouch for the accuracy).

Now, having said that... I'll be real. The characters sure are diverse, but they're just so flat and uninteresting, OOF. Which is at least partially due to the sheer amount of them. (And this is coming from someone who read that 19 POV Expanse book and ENJOYED it). The number of more or less important side characters you have to keep track of is excessive and more than once did I have to search for a name in the ebook to try to remember who's who. There was this one dramatic betrayal towards the end of the book where I literally went, "uhhh wait, who's that again?". And I think it's because of all those many, many side characters that the main cast suffers; I feel like if it merged or cut out most of the side/minor characters and spent all that time developing the leads instead, it could've been quite solid, but instead it just constantly felt like there was something missing.

Plot-wise, it was more action-packed thriller than the murder mystery I expected, and it was okay, but not good enough to carry a story when the characters didn't - see, I don't actually mind flat characters when the plot has me too busy losing my mind from excitement. But it just never quite gripped me [sad emoji] Though I DID love the gradual reveal of what exactly went down on Earth, I was not expecting such a chilling and ballsy backstory. THAT part slapped, 100%. The worldbuilding was really well done, too, if not super unique. Anyway, if you like fast moving sci-fi thrillers with lots of action and combat (so much combat!) and don't mind simplistic characters, you'll probably enjoy this book.

Oh, and one more thing that kinda sapped my enjoyment of the book was the, uhhh, the copaganda. Unfortunately™ I find myself unable to sympathize and root for cops even in a setting so far removed from our reality (and like. can you blame me. especially in the current political climate). I'm sorry dude I simply do not care for Toiwa and all I could think whenever it came up how virtuous and principled and stuff she is was huh! Cool copaganda you've got there! Yeah, I definitely enjoyed her chapters the least. Do I think it was intentional on the author's part? No, dude's clearly trying to be progressive and props to him for that. Was I still uncomfortable with the story being completely uncritical of the police as an institution and wanting me to constantly align with and root for cops? Yeahhh.

(Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC!)

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