I received this book from the author in exchange for an honest review.
It was a very happy day when I received this book to review. YA Science Fiction has been so far off my radar the last couple years I’d almost forgotten it existed. SONG AND SIGNAL was a wonderful reminder of just how entertaining a well written one can be. I’ve got a niggling suspicion Mr. Patterson is an alien that’s written about his life in the outer limits of the universe, then disguised it as a novel. Frankly, some of the technical aspects of the story lost me. Didn’t stop me from enjoying, but it did have me wishing for a computer geek to translate for me at times. Have no idea what an ARO is, but man, do I ever want one!
When I’m as excited about a book as I am this one, it’s difficult to control my impulse to revel too much. Now, what fun is it, to have someone blab about one of the crazy twists that have you wondering, what the heck just happened?!? Exactly! No fun at all. So, going to try and contain my enthusiasm, give you my basic thoughts on SONG AND SIGNAL, and keep the surprises in the book for you to discover for yourself.
Most of the tale is going to be from our seventeen year-old hero, Zakari Sharp’s perspective. There will also be a good chunk of the story told from Jeremiah Flint’s view point. Flint is a villain that manages to grab my sympathy and has me screaming…in my head, not crazy enough, yet, to yell out loud…to please not go any farther to the dark side. What a tragic antihero Flint seems to be. Elizabet Sato, Zak’s friend, shares her thoughts now and then, as well as the true demon of the book, Dominic Ventus. With a host of sub-characters enriching the story, Mr. Patterson has produced a novel that captured my attention from the first chapter read to the last page turned.
As the story begins Zak’s been caught stealing from wireheads and is in danger of losing one of his fingers as a lesson. Managing to activate his ARO, he contacts his best friend, Liz, and pleads with her to come to his rescue. Now this seems to be the story of Zac’s life; do something stupid or dangerous, then expect Liz to save him, which she always does. Zac’s not helpless by a long shot. He’s scary smart, just not much use when it comes to physical action. Liz wants to be a soldier and that’s the way she lives life. Problem is her dad has plans for her that doesn’t include a lowlife like Zak. After this latest debacle by Zac, Liz is ready to agree with her father and not see Zak anymore. After all, Liz comes from a rich family. Zac comes from a life of hard knocks. Liz has a future and a plan. Zak dreams of adventure without any plans. Adventure does come barreling into Zak’s life but not in any way he ever imagined. A dangerous quest is thrust upon him by a father that no one has seen in years. Once again Liz is going to be pulled into another of Zak’s risky exploits, but this one is going to change both their lives in ways that can’t even be imagined. What starts out as an insane search for a missing father and a stolen battleship turns into nothing less than saving the universe.
One of my favorite quotes from the book comes from Zak, when he realizes choices aren’t always between doing the right thing or doing the wrong thing; “Maybe in the real world, you do what you can and deal with what comes.”
All I can add is, do yourself a favor and read SONG AND SIGNAL. Adventure, a mind-blowing host of aliens, deadly confrontations, lies, and betrayal, I’m not sure what else could have been squeezed into the book. Sincerely hope there’s a second book in the works. While there’s no major cliff hanger at the end of the book, there are still several questions that need to be answered. The most important one for me being, what’s next for Zak?
Highly RECOMMEND to anyone 15 and older. Beware there are depictions of graphic violence.