Four Stars: Second Skin, Too by Peter Darrach

The classic science-fiction space adventure continues in Second Skin, Too, with interplanetary war, alien visitations and a couple of people just trying to keep a lid on everything!

I was freaking thrilled when Peter Darrach contacted me to review Second Skin, Too, the sequel to Second Skin. Despite my initial hesitations with the first book, I ended up loving the characters and story, and while Second Skin, Too slipped up a bit at the end, it was still a very enjoyable sequel. I’m very hopeful about the next book, though. I want more of the aliens! Why weren’t there more aliens?! Also, a warning, there may be some spoilers for the first book, so just go read the first review if you haven’t read the book ;-).
Second Skin, Too by Peter Darrach Goodreads Amazon
Title:
Second Skin, Too
Author: Peter Darrach
Pages: 316 (paperback)
Genre-ish: Classic Space Sci-fi
Rating★★★★☆ Great characters, lagged a little
Setting: Second Skin, Too is set in the future when Mars and the Moon have been colonized and asteroid mining has become a major industry. In the previous book, we had our first encounter with an alien species,  showing that we aren’t alone in the universe, though most of the human population doesn’t know that. Tensions have steadily risen between Mars and Earth as Mars pushes for more and more independence from Earth, leading, some think, to an inevitable war.
Premise: Tensions with Earth have reached the point that Mars needs to send a peacekeeping mission for talks to Earth, and Max Cody and his fiance Elaine are headed to Earth. Previously Max was damaged and repaired by an alien creature, and now has super-human capabilities, which will come in use when he and Elaine go up against a warmongering company bent on war between Earth and Mars, including a CEO who will go to literally any extremes to get what he wants.

Strengths:

  • Once again, Darrach is very good at making a realistic sci-fi setting. I believe his details about the ships and mining operations, and even about Max’s super powers. Everything in Second Skin, Too is backed up with thoughtful and plausible semi-science ;-).
  • Max and Elaine (and Marion and Daniel, other secondary characters) are freaking awesome. I’m not usually a romance person, but Darrach does a wonderful job with happy and healthy adult romances where both parties are able to lead successful lives in addition to their personal involvements. It’s awesome and a model for romances everywhere.
  • More aliens! Towards the end of Second Skin, Too we get a few more hints and then some big reveals about the aliens involved in Max’s accident earlier. Learning more about Max’s second skin was definitely my favorite part!

Weaknesses:

  • I’m really not sure what is going on with these covers…. This one and the first one, they just turn me off majorly. How do you feel about Second Skin, Too’s cover? Also the title is just awkward to type…. I am just always disappointed to see awesome stories wrapped in less than awesome packaging, since it keeps people from discovering their amazingness!
  • Politics do not interest me…. It’s a problem. The main plot of Second Skin, Too is the war and trying to prevent the war and the peace talks and blah blah blah. I didn’t honestly care that much, which made it hard for me to pick up the book sometimes. For a book with such an awesome setting and freaking fantastic characters, there really should have been some adventure!

Summary:
Let me just say, I’m really hopeful about the third book, Tavern at the End of the Universe. First of all, that’s a great name. Second, it alludes to a lot more adventuring going on. These books have so much potential, but so far the plots just don’t seem to have taken advantage of it! In any case, if you like character driven books, Second Skin and Second Skin, Too are right up your alley. Max and Elaine are characters that I honestly feel like I’m friends with. Elaine feels like a big sister to me. I really enjoyed Second Skin, Too both for the interesting setting, technology and the comfort of characters that felt like friends. It’s just nice to read books like that ya know? Now if we could work on these covers…. I’m feeling something with a spaceship…. Thoughts?

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Anya from On Starships and Dragonwings - A

 

 Second Skin, Too by Peter Darrach

Five Stars: There Comes a Prophet by David Litwack

A Stochastic review: We still credit St. Augustine for the modern Heaven, Hell, and Catholic Church, but it’s no fair to praise/blame him for the subsequent Dark Ages. We once knew when and what they were, but nobody agrees anymore. If you use the term wrong, you’re crass. So be vague about the “Dark Ages”. For example, don’t mean “600 years of religious zeal and intellectual turpitude between the fall of the Roman Empire and the Renaissance”. If you do, someone will say “Charlemagne!” and then you’ve stuck your foot in your mouth. But what if a Dark Age began today, characterized by ignorance and zeal? What if religious fanaticism permeated and then dominated our politics? Would we benefit? What would be the risks? How would morality change? How would it be enforced? What would we be allowed to do and to think? What knowledge might we lose? Could we ever get it back? How?

With his first novel, “There Comes A Prophet”, new author David Litwack gives a well-written and all-too-plausible answer.
There Comes a Prophet by David Litwack Goodreads | Amazon
Title:
There Comes a Prophet
Author: David Litwack
Pages: 286-page trade paperback from Double Dragon Publishing; 3,478-location Kindle edition
Genre-ish: Dystopian science fiction suitable for juveniles and young adults
Rating★★★★ gripping and provocative (with no sex or violence! it can be done! who knew?)
Setting: There Comes a Prophet consists of a journey on-foot starting from the tiny village of Little Ponds.
Premise: In a world absent all technology save medicine and other Temple magics, one out of every three youths are chosen by the Temple of Light for Teaching — a feared, unexplained experience that leaves them changed and haunted. Thomas of Little Ponds is taken for a Teaching, and is kept longer than most. Upon his return, he and his two closest friends fear they too may be chosen for a Teaching. The choices they make to cope with this fear will trigger a chain of events a thousand years in the making.

Strengths:

  • Thought-provoking. The implications and possibilities are kind of scary.
  • Like all good adventures, There comes a Prophet will frequently make you wonder, ”What would I do?” The answer is usually, “I’d do exactly what they did.” This is also kind of scary.
  • Considering modern totalitarian theocracies, the premise is reasonable. So is the way the whole story plays out. Again, scary.
  • Nearly everything about this novel is believable: dialog, character development, events, conflicts, responses, consequences. You’ll identify and empathize strongly with the characters. This makes for a gripping story.
  • Somehow, impressively, this gripping story has no fights to the death, no bloodletting, no demons, no sex, no drugs, no violence, not even any cussing. All tension is psychological. Okay, somebody gets a black eye, but we never see it happen.

Weaknesses:

  • The one big implausibility in There Comes a Prophet is the precepts of the Temple of Light. Frankly, they’re too reasonable. I’ll be vague to avoid spoilers: How many religious leaders would honestly endeavor to do no harm to their people? All? How many would cooperate to save humanity? All? While there would be many, there would also be holdouts who would violently disagree to the end, and kill for their beliefs. But the Temple of Light is very similar to things that could happen and have happened many times in our history, some of which exist today.
  • The premises of There Comes A Prophet are so huge that I think Litwack could have spun it into a much longer story. I wish he had. If all of Litwack’s ideas are this good, he has room to be much more ambitious.

Summary:
A friend of mine just commented, “So that period before the Renaissance: who brought Europe out of it? Europe? The Irish? The Arabs? Hint: it wasn’t the Irish. Europe had nothing on the Arabs. They were way beyond Europe. Europe was still being all Augustinian, and couldn’t get beyond Neo-Platonic logic. It was Arabic thinking that brought Europe into the Renaissance.”

There are plenty of things besides religious fanaticism that could trigger a Dark Age (war, disease, natural disaster). But if the whole world falls into a Dark Age, which it could plausibly do, who could bring us out of it? According to David Litwack in There Comes A Prophet, the only answer is us, now, somehow reaching into the future.

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-Stochastic

 

 There Comes a Prophet by David Litwack

Four Stars: Second Skin by Peter Darrach

Second Skin is a futuristic, spaceship-filled sci-fi story of Max Cody, a asteroid miner who has a close encounter just before the Mars space station comes under attack from nefarious politicians and Max and his shipmate Elaine must save the day!

Second Skin was the first physical book I received for review, but because of it’s slightly strange cover, I didn’t pick it up right away! I’m glad that I have an obsessive need to read all review copies before any library books, though, because once I got into the main story of Second Skin, I was hooked.

Goodreads
Title:
 Second Skin
Author: Peter Darrach
Pages: 327 pages
Genre-ish: Spaceship Sci-fi
Rating: ★★★★ - solid story, just missed “wow” factor
Setting: Mars has been colonized and asteroids are being mined, which is risky business when there are people stealing ships and illegally retrieving ice from the asteroid belt.
Premise: Max Cody is a worker on a legal asteroid mining ship, but on his latest mission a strange event occurs. It seems to change him physically and just in time, because the illegal ice miner “Suicide” Sam is about to make life difficult….

Strengths:

  • A very realistic and scientifically grounded system (Darrach obviously did a fair amount of research!)
  • Max and Elaine have a wonderful dynamic, made me all squee-y
  • An enjoyable take on alien first encounters. It makes me hope there is going to be a second book that gets more into these new beings!

Weaknesses:

  • For some reason, there just wasn’t that compelling “wow” factor for me. I enjoyed Second Skin, but wasn’t completely hooked.
  • The cover art on the copy I got (and is picture above) kinda creeped me out. I understand what it’s about now, but it delayed me picking up Second Skin for a bit….
  • I was more interested in the aliens than the central plot, which was probably the “hooking” factor that was missing.

Summary:

I really enjoyed Second Skin, and really look forward to reading more in this world, but it just didn’t quite reach it’s full potential for me. If you want to read some classic spaceship sci-fi, definitely pick up Second Skin, but it probably won’t be a complete speed read for most of you :).

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-A
Anya from On Starships and Dragonwings

Similar Stories Reviewed
This World Must Die! by Horace Brown Fyfe – More space adventure!
Dune by Frank Herbert – Classic sci-fi, but on an even farther out planet!

Second Skin by Peter Darrach

Five Stars: Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress

Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress is a classic sci-fi story about a world were humans can be gene-modified to no longer require sleep, making a new class of highly productive people, who become completely ostracized from a jealous non-modified majority; very compelling writing, story and characters, a wonderful read for everyone

I spotted this recommendation from Fantasy Cafe during the women in SFF month and am sooo glad I decided to give it a try. Nancy Kress is a new favorite author of mine, I just picked up the second book in the Sleepless trilogy and am going to need to start reading as soon as I finish this review ;-).

Goodreads
Title:
 Beggars in Spain
Authors: Nancy Kress
Pages: 400 (paperback)
Genre-ish: Classic Sci-Fi
Rating: ★★★★ - Awesome story, writing, everything!!
Setting: Near-ish future where gene-modifying fetuses has progressed to removing the need to sleep, increasing intelligence and disposition in addition to physical features. It is still very expensive however, creating a new class of humans both more productive and more despised.
Premise: Leisha and Alice are accidental twins, Leisha having been modified and implanted at the same time that their mother became naturally pregnant. Leisha’s life continues to be dedicated to the intersection between gene-modified Sleepless and non-modified Sleepers and their numerous conflicts.

Strengths:

  • Amazing writing, simply amazing, compelling, a completely page-turner!
  • Humbly-strong female lead character who we follow from earliest childhood and is refreshingly level-headed
  • Jumps to other character’s perspectives a bit, which helps gives a lot of breadth to the story
  • Such an interesting premise for any one with interest in genetics!!

Weaknesses:

  • The action drags a bit here and there as the more classic sci-fi tend to do for the sake of story development
  • As classic sci-fi also tends to do, Beggars in Spain asks some tough moral questions that don’t really have any perfect answers, which can be frustrating if you aren’t in the mood for thinking too much.
  • While there isn’t really any super clear villains, one of the more misguided characters REALLY annoyed me….

Summary:
I have gotten the impression that Nancy Kress is a very well-known and renowned author that I just completely missed! Sometimes I feel like I live under a rock, because if this book says anything, Kress deserves all the acclaim. This is a must read for anyone who likes sci-fi at all, or has even though about trying out some sci-fi, or has any interest in genetics. Even if the premise isn’t super compelling to you, the writing is completely awesome and you’ll probably like it anyway!

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-A
Anya from About The StorySimilar Stories Reviewed:
Dune by Frank Herbert - Another classic and awesome sci-fi!
Crystal Singer by Anne McCaffrey – Space Sci-fi with a strong female lead :D

This World Must Die! Short Story by Horace Brown Fyfe


Short story This World Must Die! by Horace Brown Fyfe, examines the emotional and rational reactions to murder in a twenty second century space faring civilization

This World Must Die!As I was browsing my subscribed blogs today I came across an article about expanding your reading experience by Jessica from Sci-Fi Fan Letter as a guest post on Fantasy Cafe. At the end of the post, Jessica recommended a number of short stories that are available free at ManyBooks.net. Since it’s a rainy and cold afternoon and I’ve always been a fan of short Sci-Fi stories, I decided to try out the first one listed, This World Must Die! by Horace Brown Fyfe.

Title: This World Must Die!
Author: Horace Brown Fyfe
Pages: 34 (available as almost any e-format)
Genre-ish: Classic Space Sci-Fi
Rating: ★★★★☆ - Solid read, recommended
Setting: It’s the twenty-second century and humankind has pioneered settlements on Mars, the Moon and still on Earth in addition to a number of space stations. Murder has become fiercely outlawed and even accidental murder and suicide attempts are punished with lifetime sentences in the Moon jail. This has led to most of the “normal” population being so emotional disgusted by the thought of murder that even attempting mercy killing for the good of the species (ie to kill plague ridden insane people bent on infecting Mars) causes “normal” people to black out.
Premise: As it so happens, a plague that causes insanity and a one hundred percent mortality rate has broken out on an outer colony and a ship of quarantined people has been taken over by said insane people and is making a break for Mars. If they land they will inevitably spread the plague to everyone on Mars which will inevitably spread to Earth and Venus as well. There is no cure yet and they have know idea how it is even spread. Needless to say the ship needs to be stopped for the greater good. However all the normal military people that have been sent to do this admittedly horrible task have been physically unable to. This has led the government to turn to four prisoners who committed violent crimes because they are the only ones who have any hope of actually killing this ship of plagued people.

Strengths:

  • Very classic sci-fi in terms of spaceships and colonies and unforseen consequences to modern societies current direction
  • Strong writing and the two characters that become the main focus pull you in to them even in the few short pages that you have to get to know them
  • Interesting premise given the debates about the death penalty and when murder is acceptable in today’s society
  • Very fast read, only took me an hour
  • There is a picture in the format that I downloaded :D (I just did a pdf)
  • It’s free! What have you really got to lose?

Weaknesses:

  • It’s a sad premise and there is a lot of death and violence packed into the pages, as could be expected
  • Because of it’s length, obviously not a lot of development could occur
  • It basically ends up saying that violence is important to have in the population, and I’m not sure where I am going to end up on that internal debate (ie my head is still confused)

Summary:
If you have been wanting to try out some classic Sci-Fi but don’t want a long term commitment, this is a good one-hour stand. It isn’t as strong as some of the other classic short stories I’ve read (Asimov is pretty hard to beat…) but it does bring up an interesting idea and presents it with some characters I grew fond of.

Has anyone else read this? Go read it and tell me what you think! Anyone have any other recommendations for good short stories (especially if they are free!).

-A
Anya from About The Story

Similar Stories Reviewed:
Dune (Another Classic Sci-Fi story) 

Dune by Frank Herbert

Last year I got it in my head that I wanted to read all those classics that true sci-fi book nerds are supposed to have read, and Dune was definitely on that list. When I am mentally able, I really love a good classic sci-fi novel. There is something so satisfying about the slower pace and lack of hand-holding of the classic style. Dune is an excellent example of this style in fact, something that makes it wonderful if that is what you are looking for, but horrible if you just pick it up at the airport because it looks interesting and you are bored….

Title: Dune
Author: Frank Herbert
Pages: 474 (paperback and not including the appendices)
Premise: Paul Atreides noble family moves to the desert planet Arrakis only sort of against their wishes. The people on this planet have some strange legends that Paul’s mother seems to have some hand in and a political plot against his family is soon making their lives even more interesting. As they then deal with the repercussions of those plots, it becomes clear that those legends are much more than just legend.
Setting: Arrakis is a harsh world that holds a great treasure: spice. It is fairly addictive, has wonderful health and mental benefits and attracts GIANT worms on the already fairly inhospitable planet. Those worms are also attracted simply by the patterned vibration of walking on sand though, so it’s not really the spice’s fault if you get eaten harvesting it. The native people, however, have found ways to deal with all these difficulties and so have free access to the spice. Between their diet and their adaptations to the harsh environment, they have some very interesting differences both biologically and culturally.

Strengths:

  • Absolutely amazing world building
  • Very well thought out native culture
  • Complicated and well developed political structure
  • Interesting character development
  • Very cool ways of describing the psychic sort of powers that develop
  • Eco-friendly message :D

Weaknesses:

  • If you aren’t that interesting in political intrigue, the politics get a bit boring in the beginning
  • A complicated world means that there is a steep learning curve for the vocabulary and customs for the reader
  • The book is definitely more world focused than character focused
  • As I said in the intro, it is classic sci-fi and so it is definitely not an easy read

Summary: It’s classic for a reason and got a lot of awards and recognition. It is an absolutely amazing world and I have to applaud Herbert for how thoroughly he must have thought about what life on a desert planet would have done to a people both biologically and culturally. An example of this is that the native people learn in childhood that you don’t cry because it wastes so much water. This makes the act of crying exceedingly significant in their culture. I think it’s safe to say that anyone who loves sci-fi really should read one of the great classics just to experience this amazing world.