Showing posts with label Bitter Angels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bitter Angels. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Bitter Angels - review



BITTER ANGELS

by C.L. Anderson (aka Sarah Zettel)
Science Fiction

*****
I actually read this book about a month ago, I can't even remember when I actually finished it. I do know I finished it right before I read Witch Hunt. :) Anyway, even though it took me way too long to finish it, the time it took wasn't the fault of the novel or the writing, it was my own life getting in the way of me reading. work, grandkids, family....all that stuff. :) No matter how long it took me to read it, I found it interesting and I enjoyed reading it.



I like the cover of Bitter Angels because it shows images of what the novel is about - and it doesn't make it look like everyone is going to drop what they're doing and have mad sex. I don't like the cover because it's ....I don't know the word I want. I do know that I'm not a huge fan of this type of art form, even though the art itself is good. Confusing enough? Imagine being in my head. I don't like it, but I like it, maybe I don't really, yes I do....I DON'T REALLY KNOW..... lol



The novel itself is about a murder - only it's not as simple as it seems. A woman, Terese, used to be a field commander, going from planet to planet calming down "hotspots" among other duties. Her ex-colleague has been murdered and this causes Terese to be called back into active duty, to the disappointment and anger of her family.



She travels to a system, Erasmus, to find out what she can and it's here that things get extremely complicated. The story is told in two main first person pov's. Terese and Armand. Armand is an indentured servant to the elite of Erasmus. Erasmus, in fact, runs on a system of almost slavery - keeping their employees in such debt to them, that they are hopelessly indentured to them for long years. Not only do we get the story from these two, but there are third person accounts of at least two other people. This could have been very confusing, but each time the pov shifted, there was a handy title to the sections (Armand, Terese, etc.)



It turns out that Bianca (Terese's murdered ex colleage) was involved in a plot somehow nd Terese has to figure out if her friend was essentially a traitor or was kidnapped and murdered.



Bitter Angels had a lot going on - a few subplots that all tied together into one huge conspiracy. The world building was pretty interesting, from the futuristic earth to the Erasmus system, the space ships, the history of a few different planets, and yet it was written in such a way that I didn't lose interest. Anything that even closely resembles textbook learning is a sure way to get me to stop reading something. ( I suffer from Lazy Brain Syndrome....it's closely related to Book Attention Deficit Disorder - a horribly debilitating disorder...lol ) After all, I don't want to sleep my life away. :)



Anyway, I really enjoyed the novel, and there was a few action scenes that were pretty good. The last scenes in the book were also pretty intense.



If you like SciFi with planets, spaceships and sinister plots, this is a good book to read.



Speculative Reading Challenge

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

tuesday teaser

This is my other favorite weekly meme - hosted by Miz B at Should Be Reading - we get a chance to tease each other with snippets from books.
I had planned to post a teaser from Pegasus, but I took the book to work (what! I thought there might be a moment of down time???When I'm working with 138 kids!!??!! What was I thinking!) and I forgot to bring the book home. So you get a tease from....


Bitter Angels
written by C.L. Anderson (who I just found out is also Sara Zettel - apparently she writes ...science fiction also...um...okay)

Before the tease, I want to share the author info at the back of the book (cause it was cute)
"C.L. Anderson has been known to tell people she lives in a stately Victorian home on a windswept island in Lake Superior with her three sisters and their pet wolf, Manfred. She has also been known to tell people she is a science-fiction writer living near Ann Arbor, Michigan, with her husband, son, and a cat. What is known is that this is her first novel for Spectra, and more of her work can be found at www.bookviewcafe.com "
This really is a science fiction book - that I picked up a while ago, I feel like reading it now, so it's going to be my go to book when I'm not reading Pegasus (I seem to need to do this).

from page 13:
" I was in bad shape when I arrived on Hospital, one of the Erasmus System's inhabited moons, named, like the others, after its purpose. Most of my fuel and ballast were gone, burned up during a run after water smugglers. Somewhere in the excitement, a safety belt broke, sending our third, Marko Keich, careening across the cockpit. He now had a gash in his head, another on his hand, and a vague look in his eyes that made me suspect major concussion."

Promising so far. I think I'm going to like it. Well, if I had remembered top bring Pegasus home, I would have put up a teaser. I'm hoping to finish it this week.
okay folks - time for bed for me!