Christopher G. Nuttall's _A Learning Experience, Book 1_ receives four stars from me. The book is fun; the situation interesting. It is a great diversion especially in the Time of Corona.
Rummel's reading. Humm, I think I'm developing an unhealthy attachment to Rummel's readings. Astounding performance. This book is no exception to his ability to create so many different voices, and his female voices are good too. I think it may also be the type of books he reads. I don't know enough about the industry to know if he chooses them or if he is selected., but someone has paired him well. For combat, work, space opera, Rummel's deep resonant voice is perfectly matched. I first encountered his work with Something Wicked This Way Comes, and his performance was unbelievable. Highly recommended.
The book:
I'm going to start with some negatives first. Nuttall gets a bit redundant at times when discussing the main character's partner. Look we understand that she's his partner, the love of his life, and in every respect his wife without the title. We don't need to hear it 8 times. Once is enough. It would have been more interesting if Steve (the main character) questioned why he never married her, and most importantly why is this important. This is an interesting aspect of Steve that is both a positive and a negative. Steve is conservative, like more right than he might realize. He has ideas about others that are dancing on the line of prejudice. I think he's set for changing his ideas in the future. This was negative because his ideas seemed too stereotypical to me, and lacked any depth. This is a positive because he isn't as right as he may think he is, and this will allow him to question and grow. Lastly, I think the author gets distracted with outside elements, like environmental protest about terraforming Mars. I found that unbelievable (but who knows maybe). The story is fine without these occasional comments.
Ok, the book. This is great fun. I loved the situation of these aliens seeking to abduct some humans, but accidentally abducted a family of military men, well trained military men. I enjoyed the development of the book thereafter (since this happens in chapter 1, I've not given any spoilers). The situation is at many times kind of comical. The plot is pretty solid. It is clearly one book in a series, but it has a goal that is met in the end. If you read this, and enjoyed it but didn't think you wanted to go further, you'd be ok. YOu wouldn't really be hanging in the air.
Recommended: The book, yes, I recommended for anyone interested in a fun story. I also recommend it highly to my friends who are military men who are unsure if they would like space opera. This would be a good start for them.