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Avery Cates #5.5

The Bey: An Avery Cates Short Story

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Cates returns to dry land on the hunt for The Pale and his possessions, and finds himself hunted in turn by the Archangel's psionic lieutenant known as The Bey. Cates has to think fast, move faster, and adapt to a world in steep decline.

54 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 14, 2016

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36 people want to read

About the author

Jeff Somers

69 books355 followers
Jeff Somers (www.jeffreysomers.com) began writing by court order as an attempt to steer his creative impulses away from engineering genetic grotesqueries. He has published nine novels, including the Avery Cates Series of noir-science fiction novels from Orbit Books (www.avery-cates.com) and the Ustari Cycle series of urban fantasy novels. His short story “Ringing the Changes” was selected for inclusion in Best American Mystery Stories 2006, his story “Sift, Almost Invisible, Through” appeared in the anthology Crimes by Moonlight edited by Charlaine Harris, and his story “Three Cups of Tea” appeared in the anthology Hanzai Japan. He also writes about books for Barnes and Noble and About.com and about the craft of writing for Writer’s Digest, which will publish his book on the craft of writing Writing Without Rules in 2018. He lives in Hoboken with his wife, The Duchess, and their cats. He considers pants to always be optional.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Patrick St-Denis.
465 reviews56 followers
February 27, 2017
As mentioned in my previous reviews, in the original series Jeff Somers introduced readers to Avery Cates, a not very likeable gunner you can't help but root for. Constantly down on his luck and not always the sharpest tool in the shed, Cates' first person narrative has been a highlight since the very beginning. And it certainly continues to be the case in these short fiction pieces!

The Final Evolution appeared to bring the overall story arc to an end and no further misadventures seemed to be forthcoming for everyone's favorite gunner. But now, everybody who is somebody seems to be looking for Cates. Some to recruit him, some to capture him. The last novella, The Iron Island revealed the reason why. Problem is, Cates is no longer in possession of what everybody wants, so he has no choice but to go searching for it, hoping to find it before anyone else does.

The Iron Island and The Pale were novella-length installments chronicling the events which began in "The Shattered Gears" and "The Walled City." The Bey and The City Lord, two additional novellas, closed the show of that particular story arc. Jeff Somers had no idea that this tale would grow in the telling when he initially set out to write the first short story. Which is why he elected to self-publish them. Now that they have all been released, the author grouped them all into a single novel. If all goes as planned, this omnibus will act as the first volume in what Somers plans to be a new trilogy. Whether or not there is enough interest from Orbit (the imprint which published the original series) or other publishers will determine if this new series will be published the old-fashioned way, or if it will continue to be self-published. Time will tell, but it seems that Somers has enough material for another compelling series featuring an endearing group of disparate misfits.

Here's the blurb:

Cates returns to dry land on the hunt for The Pale and his possessions, and finds himself hunted in turn by the Archangel's psionic lieutenant known as The Bey. Cates has to think fast, move faster, and adapt to a world in steep decline.

The post-apocalyptic worldbuilding remains the aspect which gives this series its distinctive flavor. However, the novella format forces this facet to remain in the background and it doesn't intrude on the tale much. Just enough to convey to the reader what needs to be understood and little else. Now that the entire world order has collapsed, powerful individuals are manoeuvering to carve up small kingdoms and city-states for themselves. With most technology no longer working, psionics are gradually coming into power around the world. And one of the most powerful psionics alive is looking for Cates. Following his narrow escape from a military platform in the Atlantic, Cates and his fellow escapees end up on the shore of Italy. Somehow, a psionic leading an army known as the Bey is always a step ahead or right behind Cates.

And since everything Cates touches has a tendency to turn to shit, the gunner always finds ways to find himself up to his neck into trouble. With former Stormers from the System as unwilling companions and what might be the strongest psionic left in the world attempting to capture him, it's evident that fate is not through with Avery Cates yet. There are rumors that an old-school Techie rules a city to the north and he has set himself against the Archangel. If true, that Techie could be Cates' only hope.

As is Somers' wont, the first person narrative filled with wise cracks and dark humor makes for a fun reading experience. As I always say, Avery Cates is a despicable, manipulative, immoral, lousy, and sick fuck. Yet for all his faults and shortcomings, it's well nigh impossible not to root for the poor fool. He's in over his head yet again, but that's business as usual for Cates.

In The Iron Island we discovered that the SFF built a failsafe installation designed as a fallback base in case the war went badly, as a final repository of armament, equipment, ammunition, and data. Its location is classified, but it's a place where the remnant of the SFF could remake the world anew. And the last existing field reports all name Avery Cates as the final possessor of the details: The location, the access codes, the authorization sequence. Trouble is, the gunner no longer has the piece of hardware in question. And he must now evade capture and death to try to get his hands back on it.

Looking forward to see how Somers will cap it all off in The City Lord.

For more reviews, check out www.fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Dave Smash .
8 reviews1 follower
September 18, 2016
Like a post-apocalyptic LotR, but with guns and swearing.

I'm one kindle single out from finishing Avery Cates' latest story and it really does kind of remind me of a Lord of the Rings or Dark Tower style journey/adventure. Which I'm loving. I don't know if it was intentional, but it's been a quiet, dire, funny, violent little wander and I'm a little sad it's time to start the last chunk of it. Life is always better with Avery Cates, the Gweat and Tewwible in it. So long as you don't actually have to be, you know, anywhere near him.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews