Reviewed by Cocktails and Books on
Miles Brentwood has an ear with the Seer's, the centuries old twins who run the ship. After the accident with the comets, he begins to suspect more is going on than he is being told, but he doesn't immediately question his orders. He takes his team of four out on their mission. Soon Miles is given a secondary mission to complete, one that must be done is secret from 2 of the other team members. To find a genetic anomaly and bring it back. He begins to question what they are doing on this secret second mission while he fights an unexplainable attraction to Gemme. But soon he begins to realize that something is up with what they are sent to retrieve and it may not be for the good of the ship or their community.
Together, Miles and Gemme have to learn that sometimes it is good to question the establishment and do what you feel is ultimately right, not just for yourself but for the good of everyone.
The second book in the Sci-Fi series, A New Dawn, was a little on the out there scale for me. The storyline with Gemme and Miles and their crews journey to complete both mission was excellent. I found myself wanting more and more of the foursome on the page because I enjoyed them so much.
Where the book took a weird turn for me was with the Seer's and the orb. The present and past flip flopping and how that storyline related to where we were today (or not) just did not capture my interest. I hate to say it, I would speed read through those section just to get onto something more interesting. I just felt we could have gotten away with a little less of how the twins got to where they are now.
As with Paradise 21, there isn't a hot romance between Miles and Gemme. Instead the story focuses on the characters trying to save themselves and the rest of the ship's crew along with solving the mystery of the orb and why the Seer's want it. Most of the story was very engaging and kept my interest...with the exception of the Seer part.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 14 February, 2012: Finished reading
- 14 February, 2012: Reviewed