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402 pages, Paperback
First published October 21, 2025
Kowal's Apprehension felt like a good piece of fiction to pick up next. It allowed me to keep my head in outer space for a little while longer. This book also had a great mix of characters. I loved that the protagonist was a badass older woman with a southern USA accent and a variety of trade histories including neurosurgery. Characters like these can sometimes be written to a fault- either a grandma character whose whole identity is that, or a older person who is exactly like everyone else. I appreciated the inclusion of things like arthritis, disability, complex trauma, fragility, etc along with wisdom, strength, perseverance, family, and so on. She's a grandma driven to protect her family as well as someone digging into a mystery.
It is difficult to speak too much more about the novella without tons of spoilers. I will say that I enjoyed the thrill ride that Kowal took me on and felt immersed in the story. I do feel the book also suffered a little from a sudden shift in the ending. The book almost feels rushed and like a different book altogether when then end is wrapped up. It would have been cool if more time was spent wrapping things up.
Overall, I was happy to experience another story from a favored author and to be introduced to a new one. I look forward to read more from both Miller and Kowal in the future.
This was also posted to my storygraph and blog.
“This is her.
This is how she programmed you.
Your mother’s talons are sunk so deep in your flesh you’ll never pry them off.”
“That’s what they were: two broken things crying out to one another in the endless darkness. That’s what love was.”
“All I had was a flimsy lead […] But still. Something.
I revved my [ship’s] thrusters and started hopping. And maybe I’d never find Trist. And maybe they wouldn’t want my help if I did. That’s okay. You can’t save someone who isn’t ready for saving. I hadn’t been, until I was.”