Wednesday, February 17, 2021

#Review/Excerpt - Blood Sworn by Scott Reintgen #YA #Fantasy

Series: Ashlords (#2)
Format: Hardcover, 400 pages
Release Date: February 16, 2021
Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult / Fantasy

Three cultures clash in all out war—against each other and against the gods—in the second book of this fantasy duology that’s sure to capture fans of The Hunger Games and An Ember in the Ashes.

The Races are over. War has begun.

Ashlord and Longhand armies battle for control of the Empire as Dividian rebels do their best to survive the crossfire. This is no longer a game. It’s life or death.

Adrian, Pippa, and Imelda each came out of the Races with questions about their role in the ongoing feud. The deeper they dig, the clearer it is that the hatred between their peoples has an origin point: the gods.

Their secrets are long-buried, but one disgruntled deity is ready to unveil the truth. Every whisper leads back to the underworld. What are the gods hiding there? As the sands of the Empire shift, these heroes will do everything they can to aim their people at the true enemy. But is it already too late?
 


Blood Sworn, by author Scott Reintgen, is the second and final installment in the authors Ashlords duology. The Scorpio Races are over. A winner has been chosen. A war is here. A fight against the gods themselves to determine who will control the world—and the underworld, is at hand. This story is a page turner featuring three main characters: Imelda Beru, Pippa, and Adrian Ford. Each represents a different faction of people who live in this world. Dividians, Ashlords, and Longhands. Each chapter features one of the three main characters. 

Imelda's story is in the first person. Imelda, aka the Alchemist, has done the impossible. She's the first person to ever escape the Races and lived to talk about it. She's a Dividian whose people once sailed to Furia intending to conquer only to fail thanks to the Ashlords Gods. Imelda has teamed up with the Dividian rebels and is fully committed to changing the game and making those who think they are better than her people pay a heavy price. When she finds a Bloodsworn rebirth formula, a horse that shouldn’t exist, and makes it her own, she knows that the world is about to change. I loved how far she and Bastian have come since the first time they’ve met.

Pippa's story is told in the second person. Pippa is one of the generals of the Ashlords army fighting a war against the Longhands led by Adrian. Pippa comes across as a cold most of the time, but underneath, she has plans. Plans that could disrupt and change the entire country with a little help. When Quinn reappears and asks for help, everything changes for Pippa’s as well as Adrian. The information she discovers may help lead her to change things for the better and stand on her own merits, not her parents. There’s a real connection between Adrian and Pippa that slowly comes together as they both understand that they are not really adversaries.

Adrian's story is told in the third person. Adrian's shocking second place in the races was exactly what the Longhands were hoping for. It has been 48 years since the Ashlords rounded up every single first son and daughter and executed them for their rebellion. Adrian intends to make them regret that decision by using whatever means he has at his disposal to defeat his enemies. Adrian gets a few surprises along the way, including having Imelda’s friend Farien who is offered a job of documenting everything he sees. Adrian's story overlaps with Pippa's quite a few times as they realize that combining their strengths has many advantages.

Through these conflicts, the three characters come to realize they might have more in common than they previously thought which will lead to some really interesting twists and surprises. This story is about alchemy, deception, and revolution against Gods who twisted the truth and subjugated two of the three into believing a false history. There is literally a God for everything. The Ashlords Pantheon include: The Hoarder, God of possessions; The Curiosity, God of whispers; The Striving, God of technology; The Butcher, God of Flesh; The Fury, God of War; The Madness, God of Passage; The Dread, God of caution. 

This is the first time that you will find all three characters together in one place. They each find a way to get to where they need to be thanks to some brilliant strategies, and some secrets that are revealed one by one until it is the Gods themselves who are being targeted one by one. Bloodsworn takes the worldbuilding from the first book and makes it much larger. The author digs deeper into the mythology and the implications of who the Gods are, and how they’ve basically gotten away with anything they’ve wanted for a very long time. Reintgen has created a cruel and incredible world, and he’s written a brutally fantastic story to match it. Reintgen is quickly becoming one of my top ten authors that I eagerly wait to see what they come up with next.

 




1

Changing Skies

Imelda

A single flame shines in the ghostly fog like a jewel.

I stand there, neck craned, waiting for Bastian to complain about the plan. Wind howls over a sprawl of dunes. The dark sea reaches for us with iron fingers and sand hisses against exposed ankles. I knew the cliffs would be high, but it’s actually nauseating to stand in their shadow and dream of scaling them.

Locklin Tower—a supposedly impenetrable Ashlord fortress—hides in the clouds. Only the weathered map in Bastian’s back pocket and the glinting flame above us confirm that the castle is actually there. After a long second, Bastian turns back to face me and the rest of the crew.

“You’re sure this will work?”

I can hear the way he pitches his voice. Loud enough that the wind will carry his question back to the others. He knows the plan is sound. He just wants them to hear the promise in my voice. Their crew saved me after I escaped the Races—they rode out to my rescue when Martial whispered my plan to the mountain rebels. They are also the crew who gave me my first taste of blood and war at the Battle of Gig’s Wall. After riding with them for a month, most of the riders are still learning to trust me, but Bastian knows my words carry a different kind of currency. He’s their leader. I am their expert, especially in alchemy.

“It’ll be the smoothest ride we’ve had in weeks.”

A few laughs at that. Bastian nods once. “Show them.”

The crew circles to stand in front of their ashes. Only twelve volunteered for our task. More than expected, honestly. Bastian didn’t spare the cowards on the other crew. I almost smile, imagining them piled in the cargo hold of our stolen carriage, wedged against each other and cursing under their breath. While they approach the castle as luggage, our group will ride in more glorious fashion. I glance around the circle, unsurprised to find my favorites of Bastian’s crew.

“So this one’s called Changing Skies….”

And it’s like I’m back on the ranch with Farian, shooting our next video. Walking out to Martial’s barn early on a holy day to make one of our films and hope enough people will watch to pay the bills. That’s how I got looped into the Races in the first place. It all feels like it happened to someone else, in some other lifetime.

It takes less than fifteen clockturns to get the group’s powders properly settled. Every gust of wind complicates the task. It whips cloaks into faces, snatches powders from palms. Only when the group is finished do I circle, triple-checking their work. The last thing I need is someone dying today because they mixed the wrong ratios into their ashes.

Everything checks out.

Now we wait for the sun to rise.

The Rowe siblings—Harlow and Cora—adjust their belts and weapons, their motions a perfect mirror of one another. Layne tightens her hood and comments on what fine weather we’re having. The girl is shaped like a knife and twice as sharp as one. Our eldest member—a man named Briar—laughs at Layne and says it’s nothing compared to mountain cold. I thought he was a little boring until someone told me he was a member of the original Running Rabbits. Any man who marched with Gold Man Jones is a legend in his own right. My cousin Luca is with us, too. He hums some mountain song I’ve never heard. Bastian picks up the notes, tapping a rhythm with the fingers of his metallic arm. I know it’s the more dangerous of the two limbs. When I first met him, he was winning a duel with an Ashlord sentry. His prosthetic arm is a deadly weapon, even if right now he’s using it more as a glorified musical instrument.

I smile at their talk and pretend I’m one of them.

It hasn’t been easy to carve a place in this family. Especially when half of my heart is somewhere else. I miss the way my mother clucked her tongue when I came home too late. The way my father’s chair groaned like a ghost in the kitchen whenever he sat down to read the morning paper. Prosper’s constant smile and Farian’s pursuit of the world. I spent so long trying to leave that town that I never thought I would actually miss the place.

Sunlight finally claws over the western cliffs.

My skin drinks in those first rays, and in the same breath, our phoenixes rise. Out of death and into life. Great bursts of fractured light. I glance up at the tower and am thankful for the fog. A curious soldier might see a speck of light if he looked down, but it wouldn’t be enough to raise suspicion. Besides, most soldiers wouldn’t look down on this side of the castle. Locklin’s never been approached from below. Which is half the point. I learned this strategy from the Races.

Change the game. Make them play by your rules.

“Mount up,” Bastian orders. “Low in your saddles. Complete silence until we’re inside.”

There’s the crashing waves, the crunch of sand, our beating hearts. I have to tighten my grip on the reins just to keep my hands from shaking. I try to remind myself that the plan will work. The phoenix magic will not fail us. My nervousness has more to do with how my decisions echo now. Back when Farian and I were filming stunts on Martial’s ranch, the only neck I could break was mine. Now there are other lives depending on my choices.

Bastian studies his stolen map one more time before directing us over the dunes. The horses lower their heads, forelegs flexing, hooves flicking sand. We break into two distinct rows. Six riders up front and seven behind. Bastian takes point. Against his wishes, I claim the right corner of the front line. We have argued more lately. But this decision was simple. How could I ever ask the others to put their lives on the line if I’m unwilling to do the same?

We reach the end of the beach. Here, the ocean and cliffs embrace. There’s a great smash of water on stone. Spray hisses into the air and scatters into mist. Above, the fog continues to thin. We have a few more minutes to make this a surprise. Bastian aims us at a specific section of stone. There are no handholds. No winding and forgotten stairways.

There is only waiting magic.

“Ride hard,” Bastian calls. “Let’s make something from nothing.”

His eyes lock briefly on mine. There’s a fire in them that only surfaces before a fight. I always wonder if I have that same fury buried in my bones. Is it a Dividian thing? Or something burned into the mountain-born? He grew up with a pistol in one hand and a shovel in the other. If he wasn’t working the land, he was busy defending it. His whole crew is the same way.

I watch him urge his horse into motion.

My body answers. Great snorts echo. My horse’s hooves dig down into the sand. Breath smokes into the air. Less than a few seconds and we’re sprinting. Our entire row holds the pace. I smile, imagining some witness farther down the beach. What a sight this must be.

Thirteen horses galloping right at the stone cliffs.

A string of curses sound. Faith always slips through our fingers in such moments. My faith is in the horses, though. I know the magic will work right before we make impact. I know because none of the horses hesitate. Not so much as a flinch from them. There’s no fear because they were born for this moment. It’s the same summoning I used on the first day of the Races. The one that had me sprinting sideways up a wall, in defiance of gravity, to avoid Thyma’s swing at me.

We hit the wall at a full sprint.

Normal horses would die. And we would probably die with them. Instead, gravity snatches us like playthings. The sky trades places with the ground. Our horses sprint straight up the stone rises. I’ve got a death grip on the reins. Bastian lets out a low whoop as we ascend like gods.

It was one thing to taste the impossible on my own. It’s an entirely new feeling to perform this magic alongside brothers and sisters. A glance shows all thirteen horses sprinting to heaven. We are breathless with joy and fear and everything in between.

The only sound is thundering hooves on stone.

Ahead, the fog scatters. Our sprint is no longer hidden. I can see where the cliff ends and the castle walls begin. The blocks of stone are massive, dotted by moss, carved smooth over the centuries. Two guard towers loom on either side of the ramparts. From our angle, they look like dull spears being thrust into the sky by invisible hands.

Both towers are empty. I can’t help smiling. The timing is perfect. Our other crew must have arrived. Devlin was assigned the role of the bloody priest. He’ll have crashed his carriage just short of the gate. I can imagine him running forward in his stolen monk’s robes. The crew covered his hands with sheep’s blood. He’s supposed to approach them and pretend he’s been attacked by enemy soldiers. Locklin’s guards won’t be foolish enough to open the gates, but every one of them will be drawn forward by the spectacle.

And we’ll ride up the undefended back ramparts.

Bastian shifts our formation, urging his horse ahead. His movement draws the Rowe siblings forward as well. Squinting, I can see Harlow grinning briefly at his sister. Another hand signal has them both swinging over in front of me.

My eyes dart to Bastian. He sees the scowl on my face and shrugs once. Fury thunders in my chest. He’s been doing this for weeks. Ever since Gig’s Wall. That first battle was chaos. My first real taste of war. I was so shocked that I could barely reload his pistols.

Which means he thinks I need his constant protection now.

There’s no time to wrestle with anger. We reach the bottom of the castle wall. Our horses gallop through a final curl of fog and burst out into sunshine. The ramparts are empty. Bastian tugs on his reins just as he reaches the top of the wall.

The rest of us follow suit. Momentum carries us over the lip and then gravity slams down on our shoulders again. I almost let out a shout. This is an ancient castle. The waiting ramparts are narrower than we expected. Bastian’s horse digs its hooves in and still slams into the opposite wall. My horse skids and the second row of riders almost sends us toppling into the courtyard below.

There’s a chaotic press of bodies as we get a look at Locklin. Our view of the castle is elevated. Looking down, there’s a courtyard that’s been converted into a training ground. Stone staircases lead up the opposite end of the ramparts, and that’s where most of the movement is. A pair of Ashlord soldiers stands above the castle’s barbed gates. One calls down in an annoyed voice.

More soldiers wait below, listening in on the conversation. Our group takes in the scene, awaiting Bastian’s command, when a tinkle of broken glass sounds.

Everyone turns.

A guard stands five paces away. His eyes are shocked wide. At his feet, a shattered teacup. Dark liquid carves rivers through the cobblestones. Cora Rowe smiles as she raises her pistol and points it at the interloper. “Well, good morning, sunshine!”

The boom echoes. Gunpowder and death fill the air. Bastian curses once before barking out new orders. Our crew divides into three groups. Two groups circle the upper ramparts, tasked with holding the upper ground at all costs. Bastian dismounts, leading me and four others down the only access ramp in sight. Ashlord soldiers shout their own orders. More gunshots.

Luca is pressed in beside me. My uncle’s bulky frame follows. I catch a brief glimpse of someone falling from the ramparts as we whip around the corner. An older Ashlord guard barrels right into us. The impact sends him stumbling back. Bastian shoots before the guard can even ask where the hell we came from. Blood slicks the floor. My stomach tightens at the sight, but we keep on moving and searching and aiming. Our path takes us inside the castle proper.

This is war.

We turn down a long hallway. It’s bright with morning light. So bright that we almost miss the Dividian standing at the end of the corridor, his rifle raised. Bastian shouts a clipped warning that has our whole crew darting behind random pieces of furniture. We’re barely hidden when the first blast punches a hole in the artwork behind us.

“Ho, friend!” Bastian calls into the echo. “We’re here for them, not for you.”

A moment of silence. “For who?”

Bastian lifts his head a little. “The Ashlords! We don’t kill our own!”

Another blast forces Bastian back down, cursing.

“The Longhands don’t take prisoners,” the Dividian calls back. “Look at what happened in Vivinia! Your lot burned a sanctuary town to the ground!”

“Do we look like Longhands to you?”

There’s another shot, followed by a groan. I peek around the corner as Harlow Rowe comes strolling toward us, stepping gracefully around the fallen Dividian.

“If you’re done hiding,” he says, “we can finish securing the castle, dearies.”

It doesn’t take long to reach a surrender. Locklin is known for hosting very few troops. The Ashlords have held this castle for nearly two centuries, against any number of attacks. Always they have boasted that the elevated fort could be held with just ten good soldiers.

I guess they should have hired twenty.

One Ashlord soldier makes his final stand in the kitchens until a Dividian cook knocks him out with a skillet. Bastian claps the man on the shoulder as we tie the soldier’s wrists. When it’s all over, our crew rallies back to the courtyard.

Devlin oversees the proceedings, handing out blasphemous blessings in his robes. Layne is picking the pockets of the dead and taking meticulous notes of our earnings. I see that one is a priest to the gods. He’s facedown, but I spy silver mechanics grafted into the back of his neck. One of the Striving’s creatures.

Eight Ashlord soldiers are bound in one corner. Dividian servants wait opposite them. Some of us watch the proceedings with drowning eyes. We’ve freed them, but I know by now it doesn’t always feel that way at first. We’ve upturned their quiet lives here.

Bastian looks ready for his usual speech when Cora crows her way out of the basement living quarters. She’s marching men at gunpoint: three startled Ashlords. Two are shirtless.




Tuesday, February 16, 2021

#Review - The Russian Cage by Charlaine Harris #Alternative #History #Western #Fantasy

Series: Gunnie Rose # 3
Format: Hardcover, 304 pages
Release Date: February 23, 2021
Publisher: Gallery / Saga Press
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Dark Fantasy

#1 New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author Charlaine Harris is at her best in this alternate history of the United States where magic is an acknowledged but despised power in this third installment of the Gunnie Rose series.

Picking up right where A Longer Fall left off, this thrilling third installment follows Lizbeth Rose as she takes on one of her most dangerous missions yet: rescuing her estranged partner, Prince Eli, from the Holy Russian Empire. Once in San Diego, Lizbeth is going to have to rely upon her sister Felicia, and her growing Grigori powers to navigate her way through this strange new world of royalty and deception in order to get Eli freed from jail where he’s being held for murder.

Russian Cage continues to ramp up the momentum with more of everything Harris’ readers adore her for with romance, intrigue, and a deep dive into the mysterious Holy Russian Empire. 



The Russian Cage, by author Charlaine Harris, is the third installment in the authors Gunnie Rose series. This series mixes historical fiction, urban fantasy, western and alternate history. In this world, the former US has broken down, and has been separated into five other countries. Each has its unique identity – New America, Holy Russian Empire, Texoma, Dixie, and Britannia. The story picks up soon after A Long Fall with Lizbeth Rose receiving a letter from her half-sister Felicia who was sent with Eli to the Holy Russian Empire because of her blood and the fact that she's a grigori like Eli. 
 
The story begins in Lizbeth's home of Segundo Mexia, Texoma (which is Oklahoma and Texas), but it largely takes place in San Diego which is now part of the Holy Russian Empire (HRE) (which is California and Oregon). Lizbeth has some challenges right off the bat. She has no crew, she's not allowed to carried any of her guns, there is magic everywhere, and she has to avoid letting anyone know that she has some of the same blood as Felicia thanks to her alleged father. Her only real backup is Felix who Eli saved but she needs help getting in to see Eli and finding a way to save him. 
 
You'll have to forgive me if spoilers gets through. It is not my intent, however, there has been a whole lot that has happened to Lizbeth as well as Eli in the past several installments which is why you should read these books in order. Lizbeth comes face to face with Eli's family including his mother Veronika, brothers Peter, Bogdan, Dagmar, as well as sisters Lucy and Alice. In case you are not up to date, Lizbeth Rose is a gunnie, offering paid protection to escort precious cargo across the continent, which is how she met Eli and was pulled into his life, where she found a little sister she never knew existed. 
 
She's not, how you say, lucky. She's often the only member of her crew left alive by the time the first chapters are finished. Felicia, who is studying at the Rasputin Grigori School, has some secrets of her own. Even though she is sequestered in an academy where she learns how to handle her magic, while also providing the life-saving blood transfusions for the hemophiliac Tsar Alexei Romanov, she's more than capable of offering some much needed help to Lizbeth in her own way, and has made some valuable contacts as well. 
 
Along the way, Lizbeth also ends up meeting the Tsar, as well as his wife Catherine who both have no ill regard for Eli even though his father was a traitorous villain. Lizbeth's connection to Felicia and Eli is strong. Her selflessness, her need to sacrifice to protect them, and her unconditional love and desire to make sure they're happy. Lizbeth and Felix put animosity aside and do everything in their power to save Eli, which draws them into a political conspiracy, a plot to protect the current Tsar, as well as protecting Eli's family from his older half brothers.  
 
As the story is once again told in the first POV, the story is more sedate and reflective as Lizbeth tries to keep everyone from knowing who she really is.  She is almost 21 and has been adulting since she turned 16, and she joined her first gang. But she has been too busy protecting her heart, soul, and everything of personal importance to truly let readers in. Her relationship with Eli, even with Felicia, opens the world to a better understanding of who Lizbeth really is and could be if she let's people into her life, and not constantly pushing them away.  
 
The ending feels like the end of a series. Lizbeth and Eli are in a good place. Although there is probably some blow back coming for Lizbeth for her actions in this book, I can't see any reason to keep the series going unless the publisher trusts the author not to drag the series on with unnecessary heartbreak and loss. Readers will probably want to read the previous two novels featuring Lizbeth before this one, as it relies pretty heavily on the events of the earlier books. As I said, when a book picks up right where the events of the previous one did, you absolutely want to understand what happened to lead Lizbeth, Eli, and Felicia to this point in their lives. 
 




Monday, February 15, 2021

#Review - Stolen by Katerina Martinez #Fantasy #Romance

Series: The Coldest Fae # 2
Format: Kindle, 301 pages
Release Date: February 10, 2021
Publisher: Supernal Publishing
Source: Kindle Unlimited
Genre: Dark Fantasy / Romance

Sometimes heat can find you even in the depths of winter.

A couple of weeks ago, I was stolen from my home and forced to take part in an ancient fae ceremony; only someone made a mistake because I'm not fae, and if Winter's Prince finds out, I'm dead.

When an unexpected twist suddenly narrows the Royal Selection to a razor's edge, the best that I can do is put my head down and try to survive, but the Prince has other plans.

Part of me screams for me to keep him at arm's length, but the other part draws me closer to the brutally gorgeous fae, and it's going to get me killed.

He thinks I'm his soulmate, but that's impossible because I'm not even supposed to be here. So, why am I infuriatingly attracted to him? I need answers, only to get them, I'll have to play with fire and hope it doesn't burn us both alive.

 

 
Stolen is the second installment in author Katerina Martinez's The Coldest Fae series. Dahlia is a human seamstress raised by three mages after she was orphaned by unknown parents. In the first installment, Dahlia was stolen by Fae to participate in a competition called the Royal Selection against women who have worked hard all their lives in order to win the competition. The winner gets to marry Prince Cillian Wolfsbane & become the commander of the Winter Courts military. 
 
She has to pretend to be Fae or be killed on sight for being a human in a very anti-human race of people. She also has to go through trials against fae warriors who are much more skilled than she is, including her new roommate Mareen. Thanks to her best friend Guillie, a pixie, as well as Mira who has made Dahlia look Fae, she's managed to make it through challenges with luck and even saved a fellow contestant, Aronia, who is the daughter of the Kings Guard. One of this books first challenges forces Dahlia to face her own fears. 
 
"Before you can defeat an enemy in battle, you must face and defeat your own fears."
 
Meanwhile, Dahlia is drawn to Cillian whenever she's around him. The foreplay between the two characters is sizzling hot just waiting to explode. Yet, there is no sex scenes. But there's also a huge issue. Dahlia has started seeing a difference in Cillian. He goes from being aggressive, to adoring. Dahlia is also avoiding the truth about things that are happening to her. She's found something inside of her that she didn't know existed. As the competition moves forward, Dahlia is more danger than she knows. 
 
As Dahlia finds herself getting deeper and deeper into the challenge, and the typical mean girls make things even harder for her, Dahlia learns about a prophecy that may have everything to do with her. 
 
“When the snow turns black and red, and brother turns against brother, upon the light of the full moon shall come the tath isia to bring light into the darkness.”
 
She also learns a huge, no spoilers, secret about herself that could make things quite interesting as the series progresses. I plan on continuing this series until it is finished. There are so many questions remaining including who Dahlia's parents are, what other abilities she may have and how she can help save Cillian.   





#Review - In Command: An Aunare Chronicles Novella by Aileen Erin #YA #SyFy

Series: Aunare Chronicles #2.5
Format: Kindle, 216 pages
Release Date: February 23rd 2021
Publisher: Ink Monster, LLC
Source: Publisher
Genre: YA / Science Fiction

An Aunare Chronicles Novella*

Amihanna di Aetes is used to fighting, surviving, and relying on her strength to get through the hard times. She thought the worst was over when she accepted her engagement to Lorne ni Taure, the High King of the Aunare, and claimed her place as the future High Queen.

It should be easy to slide into her new role. How hard can it be living in luxury with your soulmate after growing up alone on the streets?

But the more she learns about the Aunare and their politics, the more she realizes that the true test of her strength is just beginning.

Amihanna di Aetes is in for the battle of her life if she wants the Aunare to accept her.



In Command is a 40K word novella that takes place between Off Balance and On Mission (Book 3 of the Aunare Chronicles). This story takes place entirely on Aunare. 20-year old Amihanna di Aetes as accepted the fact that she will marry Loren ni Taure and become Queen of Aunare. Ami is super focused on making war on Jason Murtagh and SpaceTech for what they've done to her, her mother, and her people. She knows that SpaceTech is slowly closing in on Aunare borders, and unless they gets allies behind them, Aunare may end up going it alone.

However, the list of people who want her dead has gotten pretty long. This book really ends up with Ami releasing all of her pent up aggression that's been building up for 13 years. 13 years since she was left behind by her father Rysden. She's had enough of the High Council which seems to be working with SpaceTech, and not trying to find a way to prevent them from submitting to Jason Murtagh's machinations. She's had enough of the local media treating her as the enemy, instead of the Queen she is fated to be. 

As the camel back finally breaks with the people of Aunare wondering why she can't even speak their language, and her popularity not getting any better no matter what she does, Ami and her best friend Roan finally reveals to Aunare, Lorne, and her father what really happened to her and her mother Catherine during the 13 years she was stuck on Earth while being hunted down by SpaceForce. It's a brutal reminder of how awful SpaceForce is, and the lengths they went to in order to scare Earthers into believing those from Aunare are a threat. In way way, Ami gives hope as well as absolution to the people of Aunare for how they've been treating her. 

This book also has several chapters from Lorne's POV. Lorne is having issues with convincing allies that they need to step up and help Aunare even though SpaceTech has already attacked them. Thanks to the former King, if Aunare and SpaceTech go to war, Aunare may find themselves at war with allies thanks in large part to an alliance signed by the former King. Lorne is also trying hard to make Ami understand that part of her job as Queen is facing the High Council no matter how much she hates them, and they look down their noses at her. 

I'm glad that the author wrote this book to hold us over until On Mission releases sometime this year. It was a good thing that Ami and Roan did in order to make Lorne and her father understand that even though she can't speak the language, she was born on Aunare, and will always be part of Aunare. It will be an interesting discovery to find out what happens next now that we've seen the truth behind what Ami and her mother experienced on Earth. Will the allies step up? With the High Council stop treating her as garbage? Or, will Ami end up going it alone? 

 The Aunare Chronicles

1. Off Planet
2. Off Balance
3. In Command
4. On Mission
5. On Destiny





Friday, February 12, 2021

#Review - Masking The Truth by Max Parker #Historical #Mystery

Series: Green & Scarlett # 1
Format: Kindle, 214 pages
Release Date: January 21st 2021
Publisher: Green & Scarlett Publishing
Source: NetGalley
Genre: Historical / Mystery

A VICIOUS KILLER

Join East India Company Agent Andrew Green and Bow Street Runner Scarlett Pembridge as they hunt down a brutal murderer in 1840's London. The opening chapter of the Green & Scarlett series arrives with MASKING THE TRUTH, a shocking tale of murder, corruption and revenge.

A SPY AT HOME

The Opium War has just broken out, and Agent Green is no longer required in China. Reassigned to a post inside of London's burgeoning Metropolitan Police force, Green finds that many of the injustices he helped to create have now landed on his home city's doorstep.
When the Met's lead detective throws Agent Green in at the deep end, his investigation into the city's opium smugglers will put him at odds with the one and only Scarlett Pembridge, Bow Street Runner and London's top bounty hunter.

A TANGLED WEB

Can a conflicted Police Constable and a determined Bow Street Runner set aside their differences to catch a killer and dismantle a shadowy drug ring? How far will Agent Green be willing to go to prevent interference in Company business? Can Scarlett resolve questions of humanity and justice when she discovers the killer's shocking motive?

 



Masking the Truth is the first installment in author Max Parker's Green and Scarlett series. The story takes place in 1840's London. This story has two main characters: Scarlett Pembridge and Andrew Green. Scarlett is a Bow Street Runner and London's top bounty hunter. Scarlett doesn't go for formal women's fashion. She's just as comfortable with pants and a blouse as well as her trusty Colt Peterson handgun. She's also a bit of a rogue in how she brings back her bounties. Most of them come back worse for the wear.

Andrew works for the East India Company and spent a decade in China establishing opium trade between England and China before the Opium War made it impossible for him to remain there. Andrew, who is basically a spy, has been embedded into the London Metropolitan Police Service by the EIC where it is his mission to get to the bottom of the illegal opium finding its way into London's streets and shops. After spending so many years building up the opium trade, he now has to tear it down. Andrew soon realizes that his investigation and Scarlett's are connected.

Scarlett, meanwhile, is trying to catch a person called the Matchstick Killer. As the bodies pile up, Scarlett must put away her feelings and work with Andrew who thinks Scarlett is a rogue operator who needs to stay out of his way. All of the bodies so far have had similarities. They've all had match sticks insert in their bodies. Scarlett ends up having a sidekick who is tired of working in the factory, and wants to do what Scarlett does for a living. 

Can a conflicted Police Constable and a determined Bow Street Runner set aside their differences to catch a killer and dismantle a shadowy drug ring? How far will Agent Green be willing to go to prevent interference in Company business? Can Scarlett resolve questions of humanity and justice when she discovers the killer's shocking motive? Part of this story is also told in the eyes of the actual killer. It is hard to not feel emotion for this killer after all this person has gone through. If you notice I am not naming a specific gender, that's because it would spoil who the actual killer is and why they were so angry at those they targeted.

**The Bow Street runners were actually created in 1749 by Henry Fielding and disbanded in 1839. They've been officially named as London's first police force. Their duties were incorporated into the the Metropolitan Police Service which included Scotland Yard. The only historical inaccuracy is the fact that they never had female runners. Of course, you should all know that the East India Company had its hands in everything and everywhere. Colt Peterson is an actual revolver created by Samuel Colt in the US February 25, 1836 to be exact. It was said to be used in England, France, and the US.*





Thursday, February 11, 2021

#Review - The Velocity of Revolution by Marshall Ryan Maresca #Fantasy

Series: Unknown
Format: Paperback, 368 pages
Release Date: February 9, 2021
Publisher: DAW
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Dieselpunk

From the author of the Maradaine saga comes a new steampunk fantasy novel that explores a chaotic city on the verge of revolution.

Ziaparr: a city being rebuilt after years of mechanized and magical warfare, the capital of a ravaged nation on the verge of renewal and self-rule. But unrest foments as undercaste cycle gangs raid supply trucks, agitate the populace and vandalize the city. A revolution is brewing in the slums and shantytowns against the occupying government, led by a voice on the radio, connected through forbidden magic.

Wenthi Tungét, a talented cycle rider and a loyal officer in the city patrol, is assigned to infiltrate the cycle gangs. For his mission against the insurgents, Wenthi must use their magic, connecting his mind to Nália, a recently captured rebel, using her knowledge to find his way into the heart of the rebellion.

Wenthi’s skill on a cycle makes him valuable to the resistance cell he joins, but he discovers that the magic enhances with speed. Every ride intensifies his connection, drawing him closer to the gang he must betray, and strengthens Nália’s presence as she haunts his mind.

Wenthi is torn between justice and duty, and the wrong choice will light a spark in a city on the verge of combustion.



 
I am presuming that The Velocity of Revolution is the first installment in a new series and not a standalone because there is no way you can leave the book the way it ends, and not be expecting more. You really want to know what this book is about? Motorcycles, psychedelic mushrooms, and lots of orgies. Mostly motorcycles and mushrooms. The story is set in a (Mexican or more general Central-American inspired) place which has been colonized and where the (white) colonizers have built up a strict caste-system. The less indigenous blood you have and the whiter you are, the easier your life will be.
 
People with mostly indigenous heritage live in slums and struggle to survive, leaving them with not much energy to fight this status quo. Discovery of the world is told in two viewpoints. Nália, next to the bottom caste, a cycle rider and mechanic, who is involved in the revolution. Wenthi is a cycle cop who patrols and is next to the top caste with his mother and half-sister at the top. He's also polyamory. Never before has anyone managed to catch those thieves. Wenthi gets a chance to prove himself by going undercover to infiltrate the gangs and find the head of the rebels. 
 
Nália meets Wenthi when he catches her and arrests her after she robs a train. In order to infiltrate the gangs, a bizarre mushroom ties Wenthi's consciousness with Nália's consciousness so he can access her knowledge and abilities. This mushroom called myco also allows him to fully connect to the gang that he is infiltrating which leads to a variety of orgies. Slowly, he works his way from the bottom of society into the center of the gangs. The story develops as Wenthi learns through Nália about the revolution, its leaders, the true history is an emotional journey, as well as his own uniqueness. They each have their eyes opened to the truth of the current government and lives of the people.
 
So, my review may come off on the sarcastic side a bit, and that's only because I wasn't prepared for how different this story is from all of the rest of the books this author has written. I am not a huge fan of everyone having sex with everyone else. If that is your cup of herbal tea, you'll love this book. There is plenty of action in this story. I would have also enjoyed a bit more worldbuilding. I understand that this is a society that is being transformed into something supposedly better. But better from whom is the reason for the rebellion, and how Wenthi ends up growing as a character. If this does continue into another book, I do hope the author explains the reason for his choices and what part Wenthi's sister may play in the future. There's a whole entire story to tell about Wenthi and his sister who he protected when times were really bad. 
 



1

“The steel cruisers are out tonight, my friends. Boys and girls get something thrumming between your legs, and find communion with your spirits. Faster, faster, let the speed fill you, and chase down the night. Rattle some cages!”

The cool alto voice crackled through the tinny speakers of the transistor radio dangling over the kitchen stove. The message was just a brief interruption of the usual bullshit, and then with a burst of static, the prop broadcast kicked back in.

“—doing YOUR part for the war efforts, paying back the debt we owe-”

Nália Enapi tuned that out. Same old bullshit she heard every day, every sweep, without fail. The important thing was the interrupting signal.

“Was that for you?” Queña Povo asked. He and the cousins, about to sit down to their rationed portions of rice and beans, all looked to Nália. He lowered his voice. “Was that her?”

“Yeah,” Nália said, pushing her bowl to one of the cousins and getting up from the table. “Got to ride.”

“Don’t bring that back here,” Povo said. “We can’t risk it.”

“I know,” she said, grabbing her denim coat. “This is just on me.” She went out the door.

Of course Povo couldn’t risk it. He—not actually her uncle, nor were his kids her cousins, but they were family enough—was baniz caste. Trying to pass as jifoz caste like Nália. Living illegally in Outtown with forged identity cards. Castejumper. An offense that would get him a life sentence in the Alliance work camps. Nália wasn’t going to bring trouble on him or his kids.

And the trouble was out there. She had barely gone down the steps from the fasai—the room above the machine shop she shared with Povo and the cousins-and walked across the street to the phonebox when a pair of Civil Patrol came right up to her.

“You got cards, jifo?” one asked. Like most tories, he was rhique caste. Bootlickers working for the Alliance nucks, privileged due to having only a little native blood in their veins.

She produced her identification. Her cards were legitimate, but that didn’t stop these tories from squinting at them and holding them up to the sodium streetlight. “Where you off to at this sweep?”

“I got a call to make,” she said, pointing to the phonebox.

“Calling for myco?”

“Just calling a couple lovers for tonight,” she said. “Can I go?”

They scowled but handed her the cards back, waving her off. She hurried over to it, waiting for them to be out of earshot before dialing in her exchange. They had already found another jifoz to harass. As the call rang through, her eyes focused on the prop poster plastered on the wall next to the phonebox. Couldn’t round a circle in this part of town without seeing one of them. This one had three folks in coveralls building a warplane, with PAYING IT BACK painted along the bottom. Someone had scrawled “nix xisisa” across it. She knew only a few words of old Zapi, but she knew that. We have paid too much.

“Well?” the woman said when the call connected. Nália recognized the voice—Nic, the woman who had recruited her. Her only contact with the cell so far.

“The message came,” Nália said. “This is Nália.”

Nic sighed. “Did you already park your cycle?”

“In the alley as usual,” she said. The alley led behind the machine shop, and that was where she always kept her baby, so she could see it through the dirty window next to her cot.

“There’s the taco cart at the mouth of the alley. Get yourself a nice dinner, and your date tonight will meet you.”

Her date. As in her partner for the job she was about to do.

“And then?”

Nic had already disconnected.

Nália glanced about to check again for tories-they were gone for now-and made her way to the cart, sweet smells of pork and corn roasting wafting into her nose. Her stomach growled in anticipation of the rare treat of Ziaparr street tacos. Normally she wouldn’t dare the extravagance of even an ear of grilled corn. Not with the small amount of extra coin she earned on top of her ration chits.

If the job went well, she was promised coin to spare and a place in the cell. That money could help Povo and the cousins a lot. If it didn’t go well, she’d likely be tethered by the tories, so she might as well have one last decent meal.

“Two sweet pork,” she told the cart chef. “And an ear.”

“You want the raina on that ear?” he asked. He took a good look at her, and nodded. “Yeah, you want the raina.”

He was right, she wanted the spice. He could plainly see she was jifoz, like him. Not that any overcaste rhique or, spirits forgive, conceited llipe folk would be buying street tacos in the Miahez neighborhood, unless they were the posers trying to act authentic. But even they wouldn’t come dressed like she was, cycle cat style, in hard raw denim, stained with grease and oil from engine work.

“That’s nine and two,” the cart chef said as he handed her the corn.

“I got it.” A slick young man with smoky dark eyes came up and handed coins to the chef. “And a pair of tang chicken for me.”

“I don’t need some—” Nália started.

“You’re Nália, right?” he asked. “Enzu.”

Her partner for the job. “Where’s your cycle?” She greedily bit into the corn, slathered with spices and salt and lime, pure joy on her tongue.

“Down the alley, like I was told,” he said. “Yours the cold blue 960?”

“Yeah,” she said.

“Style, girl,” he said with a disarming smile.

The radio dangling over the food cart, this one playing some old Intown brass, crackled out again, and the cool woman’s voice came back in. “Spirits and skulls on the dark ride, friends. The time is ripe.” Static again, and the music went back on like nothing had happened.

“That’s the signal,” Enzu whispered, nudging her on the arm.

“What is?” Nália asked as the cart chef wrapped up sweet spiced pork and onions into tortillas, slathering them with roasted tomatillo sauce.

“On the radio,” he hissed. “That’s Varazina. She’s calling to us.”

“Now?”

Now.

Nália grabbed her tacos from the vendor and ran down the alley slope to the bottom of the step, where her Puegoiz 960 was leaning against the cracked concrete wall. The blue and chrome beauty could clock nearly one-fifty kilos per sweep, and that was with cornering the curves of the aqueducts. She figured on a straight run, she could hit three hundred. Nália had worked with the cousins to crank its engine power so it ran like a 1296. When Nália was sitting on her ’goiz, she was lightning on two wheels, she was fire and steel powering through Ziaparr streets.

Of course, she rarely built up much momentum before reaching a patrol checkpoint.

Pausing before getting on her cycle, she took a bite of her taco. Savory pork and spicy tomatillo created an explosion of alchemy on her tongue.

“Hold up,” Enzu said, catching up to her. “I like the hustle, zyiza, but there’s a reason for the tacos.”

“Because they’re delicious?” Nália asked through a mouthful.

“Yeah,” he said with a far too pretty smile. Back in the sodium light of the alley, Enzu looked like he might be a perfect example of jifoz beauty: dark eyes—that lit up with every one of his smiles—which complemented the tawny bronze of his skin. His black hair was slicked back, like how most of the jifozi cycleboys would do it, and his dark denim slacks and jacket hugged his thin frame. Nália was wearing the same thing, of course, but the curves of her hips strained the copper rivets holding the pants together. The cousin who had passed them on to her had been a skinny rail. “But that’s not all of it.”

He opened up a small leather pouch and sprinkled a bit of powder on her taco.

“We need to run on the myco?”

He nodded. “You’ve ridden on it before?”

“Yeah,” she said, hesitant to take a bite. Everyone she knew had tried the magic of the myco with some willing flesh. She wasn’t opposed to doing that with Enzu before the night was over, but his expression told her that wasn’t what he was thinking. “Oh, you mean on the cycle. No.”

“Be ready,” he said, sprinkling some on his own taco, and then biting into it. “When you get up to speed, that’s when it really kicks in.”

She finished the taco, disappointed that it now had a slightly bitter aftertaste. Getting on her cycle, she asked, “Where’s the run?”

“Just keep up,” he said, getting on his own Ungeke K’am. A Sehosian cycle, which seemed like treason to Nália. It was all compact and polished casing, no style or character. It was elegant, but it wasn’t beauty like hers. His looked like it had just rolled out of the factory, no personality. No love. That said, it had more power and speed than a regular ’goiz 960 ever would.

But Nália wasn’t riding a regular 960, and she sure as shit wasn’t a regular rider. She kicked the engine on, a glorious roar of petrol and steel that echoed through the alley. Putting on her helmet, she said, “You’re going to regret that one.”

“I better,” he said, kicking his cycle up. His purred like an angry cat, ready to pounce. Not bothering with a helmet, he was down the alley like a bullet.

Nália was not about to let herself get outridden by any fool on an Ungeke, and she cranked the throttle to rush after him. Out of the alley, she chased him around two curves, dodging cable cars and trucks round the circles through the Miahez neighborhood. She hit cruising gear as she caught his tail. He roared up Avenue Nodlion, weaving in between the idling autos that lined up for half a kilometer for their petrol ration from the fuel station at the circle. She was going to burn through a quint of her month’s supply on this raid tonight, so she needed it to keep her riding tight.

She needed this to pay off. For herself, for Povo and the cousins.

And, in some small way, for all their freedom.

Enzu signaled he was dropping right, which made no sense, since there was no turning circle coming up. Then he swerved off the road, through a bombed-out empty lot, and fell out of sight. She had no idea what crazy shit he was up to, but she was committed now. She followed right after, loose gravel in the lot flying behind her as she cranked her cycle into racing gear. If he can do ninety-six kilos across this lot, she’d do one-oh-eight.

The heat from the engine crept into her thighs as she crested over the bank at the edge of the lot, and the ground dropped out beneath her. She fought the urge to brake and pull back, and she saw Enzu hurtling down the dry aqueduct gully that divided Fomidez from Miahez. Under the bridges, under the checkpoints. And he was really racing, nearly one-twenty. She wasn’t going to be shown up. Not here, not tonight.

She landed hard, wind racing as the cycle threatened to skid out underneath her. She leaned left, pulling herself up and revving the throttle hard. One-eight kilos, gear shift. One-twenty. One-thirty-two. Passing gear. Closing the distance to Enzu.

Then he was there. On her bike with her, his arms wrapped around her waist.

And she was on his, holding on to him.

“What?” she shouted, almost losing her cycle as they went into the dark of the water tunnel.

“Keep with it,” he whispered in her ear. “Keep your velocity. That’s what powers the myco. Pulling us together.”

Then it was her on the Ungeke, him on the ’goiz. No, she looked over her shoulder to see herself on the ’goiz, charging through the water tunnel like a bullet from a gun. She was on the Ungeke, but she was Enzu. And Enzu was her. And she was also still holding on to him from the back of the cycle, and being held.

All while hammering around the curves of the aqueduct gully.

She had had a few rides of the myco, usually while bedding down some piece of pretty flesh who had done the same. Sex on the mushroom was a trip—every touch linked bodies, sensations reverberating, nerves firing together. Feeding off each other’s pleasure.

But nothing like this. That was a pale echo, a memory of touch compared to this.

“Too much!” she shouted. She let go of the throttle and let herself slow down to a stop. Still herself, still on the ’goiz. Enzu passed her, then slowed and turned around, stopping in front of her.

The intensity faded, but she could still feel him. His heart beating in his chest, his pulse racing, the rumble of his engine between his thighs.

“It’s all right,” he said. “We’re synced for now.”

“For…” She wasn’t sure which mouth she was talking out of at first. “For how long?”

“Hard to say,” he said, idling his cycle and getting off. “The speed, that’s what binds us. The faster you go, the stronger the bond. More intense, and you can feel each other even when physically apart. It lasts longer too, maybe all night? Maybe longer.”

“I don’t know if I like you that much,” Nália said. “Why are we doing the run this way?”

“So we can do everything we need to as one,” he said. “And even then, it’s going to be hard.” He moved closer, gingerly touching her hand. The sensation was electric, a circuit closing in her body as she felt every inch of him, become her. “Are you all right?”

“It’s…it’s…” She closed her eyes and let herself flow into it. Like when she rode her cycle. Revving the throttle, being one with the machine. Faster, faster, faster, filling her spirit with the thrill of speed.

Her eyes were closed, but she could still see. See herself, through his eyes.

She opened her eyes. “I’ve got a handle on it, I think.”

“Good,” he said. He looked up at the railbridge spanning over their head. “Because the job is going to come thundering through here, and we need to be ready. Ready to race?”

She smiled, and powered up her engine again. “Always.”