Aug. 5th, 2015

calissa: A low angle photo of a book with a pair of glasses sitting on top. (Mt TBR)

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Published: March 2015 by Momentum
Format reviewed: E-book (mobi)
Series: Aurora #4
Genres: Science fiction, space opera
Source: NetGalley
Reading Challenges: Australian Women Writers Challenge 2015
Available: Momentum ~ Amazon Kobo

Disclaimer: I was provided with a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This review contains spoilers for previous books.

After the dramatic events of the past few missions, Captain Saul Harris and Corporal Carrie Welles have found themselves on a path they never expected to be on. Carrie, more vulnerable than she’s ever been, is placed under immense pressure as she becomes the most valuable asset to the UNF. Meanwhile, Harris works with the Aurora crew to keep the UNF at bay and shield her from their nemesis, Sharley, who wants her now more than anything. As events unfold, Carrie comes face to face with the truth of her father’s past, while Harris is forced to confront the truth of his ancestor’s. The revelations leave them reeling in shock, but not as much as when the explosive truth behind UNFASP is finally revealed.

Harris and Carrie struggle with the difficult decisions they have to make, while the Aurora team endures their toughest challenge yet. Once again they come face to face with their enemies in a showdown that will rock them to their very core and change them all forever.

For the Aurora team, Centralis, is the beginning, and end, of everything …

At the end of Aurora: Meridian, Corporal Carrie Welles discovered she had been unknowingly impregnated with fraternal twins by an evil scientist. I admit I was a bit sceptical about how this would play out, feeling it was beginning to veer a bit into the territory of melodrama. However, I feel Aurora: Centralis handles its material deftly.

Centralis marks the halfway point for the Aurora series, being the fourth of eight expected books. As such, it is a transitional book and suffers a little bit from middle book sag. It’s a bit of slow, with lots of waiting around. Those expecting a lot of action will be disappointed. While there is some, the focus is mostly on the characters as they deal with their changing lives and relationships. I found this gave it a stronger space-opera feel. Centralis widens the scope of the series; more time passes than throughout the other books and we begin to see the bigger picture, the bigger threat. The stakes become higher.

Prior to this book, the plot threads involving the private lives of Captain Harris and Corporal Welles remained fairly separate; now, they begin to weave together. I enjoyed seeing this convergence. Until now, their intimacy has been more one of soldiers risking their lives for each other while nevertheless maintaining the appropriate distance as soldier and commander. In Centralis, they begin to see each other more as human beings… though perhaps not quite yet as friends.

I did have a couple of issues with the story, though these are difficult to discuss without giving too much away. I was rather disappointed in the treatment of Lieutenant McKinley. I felt his attitude was treated as misguided and something that must inevitably change. Only one person actually respected his wishes and that person had no power over the situation.

There were also some messages regarding children and parenthood I’m not entirely sure I was comfortable with.

On the whole, I found it an interesting set-up to the second half of the series. The ending packed quite an emotional punch and I’m keen to see how things play out from here.

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Mirrored from Earl Grey Editing.

Thaw

Aug. 5th, 2015 07:04 pm
calissa: (Default)
20150622_082658_Richtone(HDR)

Since it has been a month since I last posted anything personal, I thought I should probably blow the dust off here.

While the day before Imbolc was warm and promised of Spring, the weather didn't stay that way for long. It was snowing on the hills again today and the maximum temperature never quite made it into double (Celsius) digits.

When I last checked in, Wyrd Games had invited me to write a story for their monthly magazine. It was easy to determine this was a kind of audition to see whether my fiction suits them, since my work on their RPG manual had apparently been solid enough. I'd found writing for the latter project to be rather stressful (editing to deadlines is so much easier than writing to them) and had needed some time to recover. So I emailed them to see if it was the sort of thing I could take them up on later down the track. As I suspected, it was. So I'll be checking in with them in mid-October, once I'm through the birthday whirlwind of September and the local sci-fi convention in early October.

Despite the fact that I haven't had any work from Wyrd over the last month, I have had jobs from a few smaller clients which have been enough to keep me busy and reasonably satisfied. Plus, there's always the EGE blog to look after.

And life hasn't been all work, even if it has been mostly. There have also been baby showers, weddings, illnesses and deaths (none of which were mine, fortunately). There has been tea, chocolate, books and cuddles with cold doggies.

And now I'm heading off for more of the last few. Hopefully, I'll be able to carve out more time to check in here again soon.

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