"THERE WAS NOTHING BUT BLACK, AND FEAR, AND WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN NAUSEA IF I HAD A BODY. WE MISSED, I THOUGHT, THIS IS LIMBO, AND I'LL BE HERE FOREVER..."
It begins as the most daring prison break of the millennium - a wild leap to freedom from Earth into the farthest reaches of Infinity. But within seconds, Dan Godfrey finds himself trapped once more - this time in an alien world rife with home-grown danger - and imported peril: a lethal plot to track Dan through the Universe and silence him - forever!
Michael Kurland has written many non-fiction books on a vast array of topics, including How to Solve a Murder, as well as many novels. Twice a finalist for the Edgar Award (once for The Infernal Device) given by the Mystery Writers of America, Kurland is perhaps best known for his novels about Professor Moriarty. He lives in Petaluma, California.
A fun, quick read and a good sci-fi intro for young teens and the rest of us.
In a unspecified future, Earth has explored and colonized some planets. In addition to flight travel is the ability to "transmatter". Daniel Godfrey is sentenced to prison for a crime he didn't commit. He is sent via transmitter with two other prisoners to another planet to serve his term. Something goes wrong and they are sent to a strange world. They experience an arena fight, pirates, a ship battle, and more as they try to figure out where they are and why someone is trying to kill them (i.e., Daniel) on this very odd planet.
Transmission Error was interesting, It was definitely a compelling read and kept me excited to see what was going to happen next. But it felt a bit outdated in some aspects
Daniel Godfrey was convicted murder and sentenced to permanent exile on an alien world only to end up in the wrong place
This review contains spoilers Many common elements occur here Dan's companions are basically cardboard except the plucky priestess who serves as the love interest. One of the more standout plot points centers around how everyone is human and some speak English. Turns out there's a conspiracy to use a local stone to give people psychic powers and our hero is a patsy. They drive off the bad guys though many questions remain unanswered.
This is an inventive and mildly amusing yarn; it’s also one of those rambling adventures in which the protagonists continually escape from one predicament straight into another, as Rincewind tends to do in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels.
This endless series of escapes is not my favourite design for a novel, and having read some of Kurland’s other books I was a bit disappointed in this one. Readable enough, but not his best.
Apart from the Discworld, the bizarre scenario also slightly reminds me of the Brian Aldiss story, “Legends of Smith’s Burst”; although the Aldiss story is better.
My copy's a somewhat bedraggled paperback. This is a very funny book, from the first scene with the robobartender trying to swear despite its censor programs, right to the end. The adventure story is essentially a framework for such gems as the Elsh phrasebook.