Into the Black: Odyssey One is a military science fiction
book I received from Amazon Vine.
There are two editions of this book and I received an ARC of the
remastered edition. Apparently the
first edition to come out needed a lot of editing. That has been taken care of in the edition released at the
end of March 2012. I have had the
book for a while and there is a reason I took so long to finish. The book is over 500 pages long and in
the ARC form it was very uncomfortable to hold and read. As a result I would read a little, get
tired of holding the book and go to something more comfortable to read. The story was good so sooner or later I
would go back and read a little more.
Here is what Goodreads says:
Beyond the confines of our small world, beyond the well of
our star, lies a galaxy, and universe, larger and more varied than any of us
can imagine. Assigned the task of blazing man's first trail into that great
unknown, Captain Eric Weston and the crew of the NAC Odyssey launch on a
mission destined to make history.
Past the bounds of comfort, they encounter horrors and wonders beyond their imagining, with people and monsters beyond reckoning.
Odyssey One is the first voyage of the NAC Odyssey and its crew, and the beginnings of a Military Science Fiction Epic that combines both old school space opera, and modern storytelling in one great, exhilarating adventure.
Past the bounds of comfort, they encounter horrors and wonders beyond their imagining, with people and monsters beyond reckoning.
Odyssey One is the first voyage of the NAC Odyssey and its crew, and the beginnings of a Military Science Fiction Epic that combines both old school space opera, and modern storytelling in one great, exhilarating adventure.
This is classic space opera/ military science fiction. The Odyssey is on its first space
journey and is the first ship of its kind. On it’s maiden voyage it picks up what sounds like a
distress signal and goes to answer.
The rest you can guess.
Even though it is a common theme there is something for almost everyone
in the story. There is a lot of
technical explanation for the tech fan.
There is a lot of action for the action fan. There are new worlds of the pure science fiction fan. There is one element not to look
for. There is no romance in the
book.
While the plot is predictable the action is interesting. The
world building is good but the character development is a little thin. It could be because there are so many characters
and most play a major role in the action.
As a result more time is spent on the action each is involved in than on
developing a well-rounded character.
While the action came to an end there was not final solution
to the problem. In fact the last
page of the book pointed to a much bigger problem facing everyone. I do want to find out what will happen
next so I will be looking for the next book.
47 North published Into the Black: Odyssey One by Evan
Currie in 2012
1 comment:
Nice work. I'll check it out. :-)
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