Have you ever wanted to be The Best At Everything®? Have you ever been so desperate that you wrote a super buff self-insert who could do no wrong and come to no harm? Welcome to Arkarin Blackhawk’s life.
The story opens in an arena where Blackhawk is fighting for his life. According to the blurb, Blackhawk was asked to find a missing daughter. That’s not even part of the plot. Blackhawk rescued the daughter before the story begins, and this is the first in a series–he didn’t rescue her in a previous book, we don’t join him as he’s rescuing her, and we don’t really hear anything about this girl until romance demands it. Let’s just say this book is one giant info dump after another.
Things would have been more interesting in the first few chapters if Allan would have stopped with the constant backgrounds. Instead of getting straight to the story, it was an info dump about Blackhawk rescuing Astra. Info dump about Blackhawk’s superior genetics. Info dump on Blackhawk’s ship and crew. Info dump on a new set of characters when there wasn’t even time to get to know the crew of Wolf’s Claw. Everywhere you turn in this book, it is a constant challenge to get through the unnecessary information to find the plot or characters.
So after Blackhawk escapes the planet where he’s fighting for his life (don’t worry, he’s never in any trouble because Allan likes to remind us that Blackhawk is uber buff and skilled, and although he’s over fifty he looks like he’s thirty), the Wolf’s Claw meets resistance in orbit and makes a shaky jump through hyperspace (which is no problem because the pilot is The Best at piloting anything that was ever piloted), ultimately crash landing on a new planet and in need of a new ship part. Personally, the only interesting part in this entire book is how hyperspace affects people differently–oh wait, it’s never shown off, just info dumped onto the reader. And, of course, Blackhawk never experiences strange sensations or hallucinations because he’s The Best.
The planet Saragossa is torn apart by civil war between the poor and the noble, and Blackhawk’s crew happens to land in the middle of it. But they followed an Imperial spy ship (no one except Blackhawk knew what kind of ship it was because he’s The Best) and need the core within the ship to get off the planet. Simple, right? Except Blackhawk, because he’s The Best, gets dragged into the civil war and agrees to help the rebel cause.
Somewhere in the middle of the book more and more characters were introduced. Forces were moving. I couldn’t keep them straight, and I’ve read books with a bigger cast than this. It’s just that every character was forgettable. We were told this and that, and we got their entire backstory in five paragraphs, but every character sounded exactly the same. I wasn’t even up to page 200 and I was bored. Honestly, I stopped caring about the story so I can’t even accurately review it. I thought about ditching the book but Blackhawk was such a ridiculous character, I wanted to see how much further Allan could stretch him being The Best. Trust me, he went far into deep space with Blackhawk being the best thing since sliced bread. Every shot fired, whether from a pistol or rifle and no matter the distance, took enemies between the eyes. Did I mention the crew were also The Best? Slicing necks with knives, throwing knives perfectly, and every shot in the head.
HOW?????
The book was far longer than it had to be with the constant dumping. Most of the characters could have been cut and nothing would be lost, especially the handful of villains. The constant swooning over Blackhawk was probably the most annoying thing I’ve read this year. Oh, and the fact that Blackhawk’s friend Lucerne–the person we’re told over and over is the only person in the world that Blackhawk could ever be truthful with, who takes him at his worst–was okay with Blackhawk sleeping with Astra. Blackhawk didn’t even tell his friend, “Hey, I banged your daughter. Hope that’s cool.” The fact he slept with Astra, who he watched grow up, was just super creepy for me.
But kudos for Shira–space lesbians are an easy way to my heart. But the fact she also could shoot people between the eyes and was The Best was just as annoying in her as it was in Blackhawk.