Picture of author.

Mark R Healy

Autor(a) de After the Winter

11 Works 77 Membros 6 Críticas

Séries

Obras por Mark R Healy

After the Winter (2014) 32 exemplares
Earthbound (The Reach, Book 1) (2015) 18 exemplares
Dawn of Procyon (2016) 9 exemplares
The Seeds of New Earth (2014) 5 exemplares
Landfall (The Reach, Book 2) (2015) 2 exemplares
The Machine (2014) 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Australia

Membros

Críticas

Dawn of Procyon
Distant Suns, Book 1
By: Mark R. Healy
Narrated by: Travis Baldree
This is an audible book I requested and the review is voluntary.
This is a suspenseful, alien contact, against the elements or die kind of book. Being a kind hearted sucker, our main man takes a shuttle transport out to help his only friend to get something and they crash. His friend is killed and he is stranded far from the outpost low on oxygen, a wrecked shuttle, and a giant boulder type creature is watching him and taking pieces from the wrecked ship. His outpost thinks he is dead and is on lockdown. It is very exciting how he tries to survive and not get captured or killed. The is a female that takes his job and follows leads...keeps wondering if he is really dead.
The narrator is super awesome at keeping the suspension up and the emotions up and down as needed. There are some very emotionally parts as our man flashes back in his life. The narrator also is wonderful at performing girls and women's voices.
Great job!
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
MontzaleeW | 1 outra crítica | Apr 30, 2018 |
Very tight writing, professional. The story was good and unique as were the characters. A couple of instances where tense, confrontational dialogue felt a bit stilted but very good as a whole. I did feel like the story started to bog down a bit as he continued to climb the tower, but I never lost interest.
 
Assinalado
Brock883 | 1 outra crítica | Mar 19, 2018 |
After an all-out war and a long nuclear winter only androids, some crafted to a remarkable degree of intelligence, personality and similarity to humanity, seem to remain active in a blasted wasteland where finally the first small signs of renewed life show up.

The protagonist is on the run from parts-scavenging android Marauders he riled up some time ago, intending to lose or confront them before he can go back home, to a place where humans (like himself before he transitioned to a more durable body to wait the winter out) stored their hopes for a future after the apocalypse.

Or so he thinks.

Haunting.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Jarandel | 1 outra crítica | May 2, 2017 |
Pros: fascinating aliens, Landry’s resourcefulness

Cons: cliched characters, Landry comprehends the alien with remarkable speed

When Landry agrees to help a friend he has no idea that favour will leave him stranded on the surface of Proc-One, oxygen running out, no way to communicate with the base, and no hope of a rescue. Then he realizes that one of the alien enemy Argoni is nearby, cannibalizing the wreck of his scout ship.

Cait’s the optech promoted to supervisor after Landry’s disappearance. Her day’s not going well either. Her boss is unreasonable, work is piling up, there’s an emergency repair that brings its own mystery, and she’s found a picture of Landry with a mystery woman. She wants to enjoy her promotion but keeps thinking of Landry and wondering if he really is dead.

Landry’s a pretty resourceful character, surviving in harsh conditions for a surprising amount of time. Though lots of new problems arise, he faces each one and finds a solution. I really enjoyed his man vs nature chapters. The book spends a lot of time trying to get away from the initial impression of him as an anti-social workaholic. He’s portrayed as mostly friendless, with few redeeming qualities.

For the most part I liked Cait, though she’s somewhat cliched as well, a female mechanic trying to prove her worth to her father and male co-workers. She’s conflicted in that she’s happy to be promoted, but she doesn’t feel that abandoning Landry is fair, regardless of the circumstances for his disappearance. I did find it strange that the picture of Landry and his wife made her reconsider him as a person. I wouldn’t have thought his personal relationships would matter if she believed him a jerk for being so stand offish at work. There’s a chapter towards the end of the book where she makes some baseless assumptions about him that her own investigations don’t support.

There were some plot points that didn’t make much sense to me, starting with how Landry and Gus managed to steal a scout ship out of a military installation that requires passing through some sort of airlock. Surely there would be notification that the outer door has been opened, if there isn’t anything showing that a scout ship has been activated.

While I liked the pacing of most of the book, the ending progresses too quickly to feel realistic. It’s hard to believe Landry could come to comprehend anything at all from something so alien, but to do so as quickly as he does defied belief. I did enjoy learning more about the aliens and found these chapters very interesting, regardless of how contrived parts of it felt.

Having said that, the book’s ending was rather cool, with sequel potential.

This is a flawed book, but one that reads quickly and has some interesting ideas.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Strider66 | 1 outra crítica | Apr 18, 2016 |

Listas

Estatísticas

Obras
11
Membros
77
Popularidade
#231,246
Avaliação
3.9
Críticas
6
ISBN
10

Tabelas & Gráficos