When the spaceship Colony is forces to abort its mission to colonize Tau Ceti III and instead crashlands on Earth, it's a homecoming for fourteen-year-old Welkin Roberts. Well...sort of.
Welkin is a Skyborn. Having lived his entire life on board a spaceship, his only memories of his home planet is what he has studied from the Colony archives. Believing the Earthborn no better than animals, the Skyborn elders decide to exterminate them before recolonizing Earth. On a reconnaisance mission, however, Welkin is ambushed by a gang known as Jabbers. Rescued by a rival gang of teenage survivors, Welkin realizes he needs the help of these Earthborn to survive.
I picked this up in a bargain bin cause I liked the cover art. But - I was surprised TOR published this. This was really not a good book. After an unsuccessful mission to colonize a far planet, a generational spaceship has aborted that mission and decided to return to earth - and conquer it. The elite of the ship have viciously put down a mutiny against this, imprisoning a great many 'mutineers' to the lower levels, and considering them subhuman. They also believe that the inhabitants of earth have, post-apocalypse, degenerated to a subhuman level. (Neither are actually subhuman.) Both ship and earth have mysteriously and unexplained-ly suffered diseases which cause most people past puberty to die. Not only is this really major coincidence never dealt with, characters just don't behave as if they are in the situations that the author puts them in, or have had the life experiences referred to. There's no character believability. There are references to our era that generations of teenagers would have long forgotten - the people in the book don't really seem to be people of their world. For example, they keep referring to each other as 'kids,' expecting a certain level of immaturity - but if people consistently die in their 20s or younger, they would fully be considered to be adults, and to behave as such. It was just stupid. And the story didn't really go anywhere. Not recommended.
One in a series of Books detailing Mans Expedition from Earth to the Stars and Back, however reads well as a standalone book. This book details the return of those who'd gone into Space to colonize another planet light-years away , only to realize that colonization was unfeasible.
They return home (Earth) to a desolate wasteland, the product of a nuclear war and the consequent Nuclear winter having regressed the human race. The former-colonists (Now space-farers) - the result of a eugenics program view themselves as a superior race, and plan to exterminate the current residents of earth and re-establish their take on human society. However, the current inhabitants of earth have other ideas.
The book pits the ideas of totalitarianism against freedom of thought / expression , and of natural selection vs. Selective breeding against the backdrop of human resilience, and will to survive. Unfortunately lacking in much depth, it hints at being a great book, but never quite achieves it, better than an average read.
An Interesting book that should appeal to fans of the Hunger Games Trilogy.
Welkin is a Starborn. A member of an elite group sent out to colonize space. But the Starborn have abandoned their mission and now they're back. The Earthborn are warring factions trying to survive on what is left of the Nuclear ravaged planet. The returning Colony could have been a God Send, a ray of hope. But as Welkin soon discovers the Colony Elders have one plan in mind for the Earthborn. Extermination.
Welkin once had ideals in keeping with the Elders plans but once his best Friend is marked as an Earthborn sympathizer Welkin gets caught in the witch hunt. The elders are making their own enemies because now Welkin finds himself in the position of either joining the Earthborn or dying.
I enjoyed the plot and there was plenty of action in this book. I have to agree with some of the other reviews here and say that the storyline was a bit choppy. I kept flipping back to see if I had missed pages. The author does a good job with some main scenes but seems to have a hard time with joining those scenes together. Like Sarah is sick on one page and two pages later she is passing on her book and going off to die, there is no build up or proper progression between the two events. I liked the characters he created and found the world he presents interesting. Still, this book could have benefited from more story building.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book had great characters and an interesting plot line but did not spend enough time developing them. I kept feeling as if I'd missed something. I kept flipping back to make sure I hadn't skipped a chapter. In the end, I felt as if too much was unresolved or unexplained.
This wasn't too bad for a kid's book. I would have loved to read this when I was in middle school. However, my district would have never allowed it because of the amount of violence in the story.
Great book; there should be a second. So much left for the reader to think about and finalize for themselves! The writing style is complete and the book is packed with action and suspense. Loved it.