"Mass Effect: Andromeda--Initiation," by N.K. Jemisin and Mac Walters, despite the bland, dull title, is a pretty awesome book. Something like "Initiation" is what Mass Effect fans have been hoping for all along. In fact, I'd go as far to say that this novel would have made a great DLC playable adventure, that is if EA hadn't done everything possible to screw up and/or sabotage the Mass Effect: Andromeda video game and the Mass Effect franchise in general by cutting corners and shoving loot boxes into the multiplayer...and so on.
The central character of "Initiation" is Cora Harper, the Asari-trained, former Earth Alliance Human biotic soldier. She is a valuable supporting character and possible love interest during the Mass Effect: Andromeda video game. The secondary character is Alec Ryder, the Human Pathfinder. He plays a small, but pivotal role in the Mass Effect: Andromeda video game.
Lieutenant Cora Harper is coming home after years in Asari space as a biotic soldier or "huntress." She was part of an interspecies military exchange program. Her mentor steered her towards the Andromeda Initiative--a venture to colonize the next galaxy. But Cora isn't so sure the Andromeda Initiative is where she wants to be, since it involves 600 years of being frozen to reach the Andromeda Galaxy. And there are no guarantees about what they will find when they arrive.
That's where Alec Ryder, the Human Pathfinder, comes in. He's Cora's direct superior in the Initiative. But the two of them don't develop a rapport right off the bat. Ryder needs to know if Cora has the right mettle to be his successor in the job as Pathfinder--both a military leader and a diplomat (with ambitions to explore the next galaxy). Hid first assignment for her is a dangerous one--to recover stolen Andromeda Initiative technology from a shadowy cabal. To do this, she reunites with an Asari mercenary she knows very well. And she agrees to have an "almost" artificial intelligence wired into her head. In the Mass Effect universe, any artificial intelligence usually becomes some kind of untethered evil force determined to wipe out all the "flawed" organic species.
But the theft of the proprietary tech is only the beginning of a much larger conspiracy. There are forces in our galaxy who don't want the Andromeda Initiative to succeed. Not only do they want to control Ryder's innovative tech, they want to destroy it if they can't possess it. And Cora finds herself with no one to trust except the computer voice in her head, which may be too close to a true artificial intelligence to really rely on.
"Initiation" is the best Mass Effect novel in a long, long while. If you're a fan of the Mass Effect universe, this is going to be a fun read for you.