#Sci Fi Month Review of INDIE Ebook On Silver Wings – Book 1 of the Hayden War Cycle series by Evan Currie #Brainfluffbookreview #SciFiMonthOnSilverWingsbookreview

Standard

I’ve enjoyed Currie’s writing – see my review of Heirs of Empire – and this is a series Himself has been nagging suggesting that I read for a while now, so I’m linking my review with Sci Fi Month…

In the future, mankind has colonized other worlds, mined asteroid belts, and sent ships so far into the blackness of space that light from their drives won’t reach Earth for centuries. Through it all, life has been found in almost every system we visited and yet we’ve never encountered another intelligent species. Until now.

When the Colony on the planet known as Hayden’s World stops transmitting on their CASIMIR FTL system, a Solari Fleet Task Force is sent to investigate. When they arrive there are enough oddities in the situation that they in turn send in a special operations unit to contact the colonists and determine what happened. Only one of those operators survives to make planetfall. Sergeant Sorilla Aida finds herself against an alien force of unknown power and capability. Her only assets? A depleted suit of power armor, her rifle, basic kit, and a few hundred Hayden born civilians looking to take back their home. Just what she was trained for.

That is the starting point of the book and the opening sequence is punchy and full of drama. I love Sorilla and the cool high-tech toys she has to play with. I also enjoy the fact that the medical tech is also very whizzy and high-functioning so we don’t have a single soldier going up against a powerful alien enemy with a collection of serious injuries when by rights she shouldn’t be moving from a hospital bed. That’s a scenario I get a tad tired of in this sub-genre at times. Currie is careful to ensure the physical limits of his super-soldier are sufficiently realistic so that while I’m sympathetic and concerned about her pain – I’m not rolling my eyes at being yanked out of the story at the unfeasibility of it all.

Currie also handles the scene changes and inevitably wide cast of characters that have to be involved in this type of scenario without holding up the pace with lengthy info-dumps or those wincing, ‘As you know, Bob…’ conversations. I found some of the early engagements both exciting and the aftermath genuinely poignant. The outcomes matter – not just on an epic Earth-is-at-stake scale, but on the personal level where friends and lovers are lost.

There is plenty of action and tension to make me continue turning the pages in order to find out what happens next in this exciting military sci fi adventure. One of the reasons I wanted to continue turning those pages was to find out more about the mysterious aliens and their terrifying weapons. Currie’s deft handling of the steadily increasing bank of knowledge about these creatures was a major contribution to this enjoyable opener to this series. I now know why Himself kept banging on about it.

Highly recommended for fans of epic and engrossing military science fiction.
9/10

19 responses »

  1. I very much enjoy military science fiction. You have me intrigued, Sarah. And thanks for your wonderful review. I’ve been reading Nicholas Sansbury Smith’s Hell Divers series and loving them. This could be another winning series for me.

  2. I don’t tend to read a lot of military sci fi – two terms than normally turn me off – although I am trying to read more. Every day in every way I’m getting better!
    Lynn : D

  3. Sounds like an interesting and powerful set up for a story. Glad to hear this was a good read. I like the sound of the high tech toys the main character has. And that’s great the author handles the physical limits in a realistic way, I like it when authors keep things realistic. Great review!

  4. Pingback: Mission Status Update: first star on the left – x+1

    • To be honest, it’s something of a mixed bag – but at it’s best, it can be great, adventure-filled fun. And the likes of Adrian Tchaikovsky can also raise some pertinent questions along the way, too:)

  5. I just went over to Goodreads to add this book, and noticed that I already had it on my shelves. Lol!! I must have added it some time back. 🙂

    That cover is interesting, and so is the plot! I LOVE science fiction novels that have dynamic women as central characters. There should really be some sort of organization, right now, on planet Earth, whose mission is to ENSURE that women get into space! But it’s nice to see Sf novels paving the way!

    I always enjoy reading your reviews, Sarah, and this one is no exception! You have a very well-balanced view of a book’s plot and characters. Keep up the good work!!

    Hope you have a SUPER nice weekend!! CHEERS!!! ❤ ❤ ❤ 🙂 🙂 🙂

    • Thank you for your kind words about my reviews, Maria – I’m so glad you find them helpful!

      I’m delighted there are so many excellent sci fi books featuring dynamic, engaged female characters – and I’ve read several more, too. I hope you get a chance to read this one – it’s great fun and I’m looking forward to reading more in this series:)). I hope you, too, have a lovely week-end, Maria!

  6. Another enticing read! Now I’m starting to worry about the rest of your November posts. If every single review will introduce me to a new exciting book, my TBR will swell too much and surely burst.
    Nevertheless, I want to read this one. 🙂

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.