'Anomalous Thrust' is the 4th book in Sliding Void series. It's a completely stand-alone adventure, not directly linked to the first three books (although 'Anomalous Thrust' is set chronologically a year after the end of the previous books).
DESCRIPTION
Captain Lana Fiveworlds might be flying with the same motley crew of misfits, but her problems are all-new.
Lana believes that a demanding and difficult client on board her beloved starship - the Gravity Rose - is the sum of her woes. But that was until she has to emergency ditch inside a star system which holds a full range of deadly secrets.
There are the murderous intentions of the local government with its slave-owning aristocracy to contend with, not to mention the ruthless rebels trying to overthrow the regime. And then there's the moon-sized unknown alien vessel that jumps into the system every few centuries, along with the chance to claim untold riches. Or the chance to die, well, really quite horribly.
With Calder, Zeno, Skrat, Polter and the chief still helping Lana, there's the smallest of chances the crew might survive. But as every spacer knows, it's not where you jump into hyperspace that counts. It's only ever where you end up!
Stephen Hunt is a British writer living in London. His first fantasy novel, For the Crown and the Dragon, was published in 1994, and introduced a young officer, Taliesin, fighting for the Queen of England in a Napoleonic period alternative reality where the wars of Europe were being fought with sorcery and steampunk weapons (airships, clockwork machine guns, and steam-driven trucks called kettle-blacks). The novel won the 1994 WH Smith Award, and the book reviewer Andrew Darlington used Hunt's novel to coin the phrase Flintlock Fantasy to describe the sub-genre of fantasy set in a Regency or Napoleonic-era period.
This book continues from the Sliding Void trilogy of novellas. Here things aren't going well for Captain Lana Fiveworlds and the crew of the Granny Rose. There's a difficult client on board and the crew need to perform an emergency ditch into a star system. Not just any star system though but one which contains a murderous government and an enormous unknown alien vessel...
The action starts immediately and it carries through right to the end of the book. There's a massive threat, the crew overcome it only to face another massive threat. This happens about five times and it's exhausting.
In terms of plot Hunt does a good job at keeping the tension high, moving on the character's stories, inserting some great sci-fi ideas and remembering to keep a little humour within it. The final third dragged for me though with it taking ages for anything to actually happen and it's this that let the book down a little.
I liked the ending which teased more on the truth behind Lana and Calder with a neat twist. It wasn't at all what I expected and I'm intrigued to where the characters will go from here. I hope it means more Sliding Void books in the future!
Overall, an enjoyable space opera with some great ideas.
The same favorite characters from the earlier books in the sliding void series show up in this book and find themselves in several dire circumstances all at once. This is one of the best science fiction series I've read. I hope another book in this series is in the works.
Liked book 1, definitely liked books 2 and 3, but was disappointed by this one, it felt as if it was struggling, and I found myself skim-reading quite often. I like the characters but if there's a book 5, which seems likely, I might download a sample first.
Action adventure in space - this starts with a jump into the action (I need to go back and read the previous two sections, I think) and barely pauses for breath. An intriguing plot-thread is carried on from previous books - and there is a teaser epilogue which reminds us again why one of the main characters is important. Further clues are dropped about the 'Gravity Rose' and her captain.
This was an 'free' book, read while checking for typo(e)s.
Reread May 11 - 19 2016 prior to paper publication.