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Joel Dane

Autor(a) de Cry Pilot

4 Works 117 Membros 6 Críticas

Séries

Obras por Joel Dane

Cry Pilot (2019) 80 exemplares
Burn Cycle (Cry Pilot) (2020) 22 exemplares
Kill Orbit (Cry Pilot Book 3) (2020) 13 exemplares
The Ragpicker 2 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

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Membros

Críticas

Just as good as the first one in the series.
 
Assinalado
jvnickerson | 2 outras críticas | Jul 10, 2021 |
A compelling military SF book. Most interesting is the bonding between a pilot and a machine, a kind of metahuman system.
 
Assinalado
jvnickerson | 2 outras críticas | Jul 10, 2021 |
Dane, Joel. Burn Cycle. Cry Pilot No. 2. Ace, 2020.
Joel Dane is the nom de plume of an Army brat who grew up to be a bicoastal screenwriter and novelist. I also suspect he grew up playing first-person shooter videogames. Burn Cycle is a close sequel to Cry Pilot, and like its predecessor, it is straight-ahead military science fiction. A future earth city has been taken over by a nonhuman intelligence that seems intent on wiping out anyone it contacts. The action here involves small-unit, high-tech ground assault. The grunts don’t always trust their leaders, and they constantly worry that their tech has been hijacked. The character conflict is good enough that it inspired a positive review from C. J. Cherryh. One missed opportunity—we are told there are very advanced Ais, but Dane keeps them at a distance and never lets one become a character in its own right.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Tom-e | 2 outras críticas | Mar 24, 2020 |
Cry Pilot by Joel Dane introduces readers to a far future Earth that had nearly succumbed to global environmental destruction. Thanks first to AIs, then to corporatised military, the Earth is now slowly healing. Terrafixing is repairing the planet, but it also repairs biomechanical creations from the last great world war, resurrecting them as Remorts. For the strongest Remorts, CAVs are employed. These nimble machines seem made to be symbiotically paired with a human pilot, though no-one knows how. Instead, cry pilots are used, and when the pilot dies, the CAV returns home. These kamikaze pilots are taken from the criminal pool. A pardon, and chance to join the military, await the scant few lucky enough to survive.

Maseo Kaytu is a man with secrets, and the need to make reparations. Unable to enlist in the military by normal means, Maseo commits a crime, and volunteers as a cry pilot. Managing to survive by wiles, Maseo gets to enlist, but before he and his group are ready, they are sent after a deadly new Remort, one capable of chewing up CAVs. Can the fledgling Javelin squad survive long enough to learn about these new creatures and how to destroy them, or is humanity's time about to be up?

I wasn't feeling this book to begin with. There were several things that felt like they didn't have enough explanation to start with, and it left me feeling confused. After about the first third, the story became quite engaging, and things were fleshed out. The training and initial conflicts with the lampreys were exciting, and once they left training, the action got pretty intense. Just don't get too attached to characters! Several die some pretty grim deaths. Fighting the lampreys is no joke. I'm glad my favourite character- Ting Ting- makes it to the end. I'm looking forward to seeing how things progress with her in the next book.

I loved the concept of the technopaths! I hope we get to meet more in the next book. It seems like they could be very valuable assets against the lampreys. Most die young or are killed given how unpredictable and dangerous being an untrained technopath can be. But we see a potential maintenance medicine here, with stem, and it seems like such an obvious solution that maybe the government is using it on their captured technopaths, and not owning up to it. Just the ability to control tech with your mind sounds so cool! I found Kaytu's unique meditation fascinating and I want to learn more about the culture that created it. Recommended, especially if you enjoy the Red Rising series by Pierce Brown.

***Many thanks to the Netgalley & Berkley/ Ace for providing an egalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
PardaMustang | 2 outras críticas | Dec 31, 2019 |

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Associated Authors

Matt Griffin Cover artist

Estatísticas

Obras
4
Membros
117
Popularidade
#168,597
Avaliação
3.9
Críticas
6
ISBN
12

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