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Bob and Nikki #1

Bob's Saucer Repair

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Alternate cover edition of ASIN B07TCN8WYB

Ride along as Bob's life goes from ordinary to out of this world. Helping a stranger in need changes everything. Spend a little time on a fun romp with Bob and Nikki.

183 pages, ebook

First published June 20, 2019

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About the author

Jerry Boyd

67 books291 followers
I’m a house husband. I keep things together while my wonderful wife makes our living. I’ve worked as a machinist, short order cook, electronics assembly tech, and several other jobs. My hobbies include vehicle maintenance, (I’ve had the transmission out of my truck. Twice) free flight airplanes, electronics, and shooting.
I was born and raised in the Ozarks, and now live in Mid-Missouri.

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5 stars
1,831 (46%)
4 stars
1,086 (27%)
3 stars
645 (16%)
2 stars
212 (5%)
1 star
136 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 370 reviews
Profile Image for Christi M.
345 reviews86 followers
January 2, 2021
I’m not sure I’ve seen a book like this before and I’m not sure sure what to make of it. There are no chapters and it is 90-95% straight dialogue. There are no descriptors. No internal conversations that provide you with insight into characters motivations. No background information on any character. For example, Bob mentions to Nikki he knows someone who can help out. A few sentences later he is calling John and a few more after that John is at the house. We are never told what John looks like, history, hobbies. He’s called and then he shows up.

Bob’s Saucer Repair begins when Bob pulls up to his house one day and sees an alien trying to fix her spaceship. The spaceship needs some coolant and few other broken parts fixed and Bob is more than happy to help Nikki (the alien) out. She has to leave sooner than expected and Bob feels her absence because he rather liked her company – a lot. But as it turns out Bob’s help is so invaluable that the aliens come back and offer him a business opportunity to provide saucer repair to other aliens. Almost immediately upon accepting the job the real adventure starts happening.

The main characters are Bob and Nikki, but the group grows and John becomes an integral part to the space repair shop too. Although there are several different characters, I found their personalities were a little too similar to each other. As a result, there weren’t many distinguishing characteristics between them other than a few examples here and there. I also found that the human characters all accepted the idea of aliens and spaceships a bit quicker than one might expect.

While the novel does have a decent amount of flaws, there is also a sense of joy that comes across in the writing. The story offers humor, romance, and a sense of sci-fi fun.
Profile Image for Jamie.
196 reviews4 followers
June 19, 2022
How does this have the rating it does? The writing is probably the worst I have seen outside of a fan fic forum. The romance is dreadful, the plot is stupid, and the actual writing itself is similar to what you would expect from a 12 year old. Everything happens so conveniently and the jokes are painful. It is all just dialog and wish fulfillment. A alien just happens to be using the garage of a man who can fix a space ship, the space ship just so happens to need the same coolant that cars need, the main characters just so happen to instantly love one another, the best friend just so happens to be able to preform emergency surgery, the bank just so happens to give a loan on a piece of land right next to the doctor friend, you name it, this book will solve any crisis within two pages. Also, so the alien from the advanced planet that happens to be a guide and also a pilot gets to loan their expert skills to all of this as a cook because she happened to watch one Youtube video? Come on. Really bad.
Profile Image for William Howe.
1,866 reviews91 followers
August 10, 2019
I wanted to like this

Decent plot, good dialog, amusing characters.

But.

The pace is all wrong. All talk and no descriptors (she said, he motioned, their eyebrows raised) makes for an uneven narrative. Pages of dialog with no descriptors only works for soliloquies. People don’t simply sit still when talking.

Then there is the magic tech. Too handwavium and used too much. Sleep teaching is a time honored trope, but this novel overuses the concept.

I personally got bounced out when the MC took possession of his new real estate property and discover a mysterious bunker. Basic realty concept is that the seller has to make the buyer aware of all structures on the property *and* any hidden defects they are aware of. Mysterious bunker with no available key should have been disclosed at least during signing. Especially if a bank is involved!!!

The only thing missing was the retired Navy SEAL/Marine Scout Sniper/Sooper Green Beanie.

The beginning of the book had potential, but it did not develop well and ultimately crashed.
Profile Image for Black Pepperz.
17 reviews
August 17, 2021
Grease monkey meets fuckable alien chick. A boring love story develops while they are having fewer cultural / language / biological barriers than he would have with a French Canadian.
This is probably the most unimaginative sci-fi story I have ever read. The language is dull, the story boring, the "alien" thinks, behaves, and talks like the valley girl next door. Basically, the author removed everything from his "science" fiction that actually makes this genre interesting.
Profile Image for Dan Sherrel.
9 reviews
November 18, 2019
Memories

It was like reading a 1950s pulp story, Amazing stories or the like. Brought back memories from the golden age of SF
64 reviews
March 28, 2020
I wanted to like this, but the writing style was just too vague for me to enjoy the story. It is a cute idea, I just really wish an editor had sat down and steered the author in a better direction stylistically. It was very, very dialogue heavy. Descriptions of any kind were thin on the ground, which meant I had no idea what any of the characters or their surroundings looked like. I also didn’t get a good feel for who the characters really were - generally I understand that all the mains are easy going with quick senses of humor, but that was applicable to them all without much differentiation. Only difference is one is an easy going former doctor, one is an easy going mechanic, and one is an easy going interstellar guide who apparently is female and thus immediately the love interest of Bob. Go figure. Several people were clearly unaffected by this and enjoyed the book thoroughly. I immerse myself in stories far too much to do so.
388 reviews
December 25, 2019
Just plain fun

Pure entertainment, right up there with premium frozen custard without calories. The culture memes might be as much fun as in Anderle's "Kurtherian Gambit" (even if much more blatant). Give yourself a special treat and read this straight through.

UPDATE: I was doing a re-read of "Bob's Saucer Repair" and figured out why I like it so much. (Other than Snitz world.) Good authors have a love of language and a playful and or elegant relationship with words. They also view things more "deeply" and at more objective, maybe skewed, levels than most. And, the really good ones are master people watchers. There's a joy to the work. Yep, that's why I'm liking this.
Profile Image for Debrac2014.
2,389 reviews20 followers
January 23, 2020
Fun action packed story! It's told in the first person, mostly dialog!
Profile Image for Tony Hisgett.
3,059 reviews37 followers
April 20, 2021
The story had the feel of a 1960s pulp SciFi book, it was easy to read, although everything was a bit too easy for the main characters. There was a lot of banter, which was quite amusing to start with, but after a while it becomes a bit excessive, bordering on tedious.
If possible I would have given 2.5 stars.
67 reviews
June 29, 2022
You got to be kidding me

I bailed out one third of the way through .I should have done so during the first few paragraphs where the protagonist drives home only to find an alien repairing her flying saucer in his garage and he walks up to her and asks her what she is doing. It goes down hill from there
Profile Image for Micha.
53 reviews1 follower
July 15, 2021
I couldn't even get through this book (made it 3/4 of the way). Not only is the writing terrible, the story itself is lackluster. I read a lot of Sci-fi and fantasy, and am always excited to find a good book by an indie author. But some are a miss. And this one didn't even come close to connecting.
Profile Image for Yankey.
170 reviews7 followers
October 18, 2021
jr level writing

This writers style is not even suited for teen sci-if. Goofy without being funny, excessively long chapters and a good premise gone to waste.
Profile Image for Pat Patterson.
353 reviews7 followers
October 4, 2020
I'm finally getting some reviewing done, and this one has been sitting the longest. I've blogged about it, at https://habakkuk21.blogspot.com/2020/...

This one is most delightful; I found nothing to object to. The book has had some changes in the cover art, and the most recent cover reminds me of "The Hitchhikers Guide" series, and that's good. It's funny; there is an adventure story, but don't come looking to have exploding spaceships take you all the way. Instead, relish the dialogue:

“You have a point. Your hair covers it, though.”
Boyd, Jerry. Bob's Saucer Repair (Bob and Nikki Book 1) . Jerry Boyd. Kindle Edition.

The protagonist is: a mechanic. Bob, the mechanic. He arrives home at the end of a work day, anticipating chili and beer, and discovers a broken spaceship (not an exploding spaceship!) in his garage. He does NOT freak out; he invites the pilot, Nikki, to hang out while he mends a coolant pipe. Amusing cultural differences emerge, and the effect is made delightful by the fact that both Bob and Nikki are quick with a quip and an insult.

She is a pilot/guide to interstellar graduate students, who sought to cut costs by procuring a junker spaceship. Bad choice. Fortunately, Bob, then his medic buddy John, pull their chestnuts out of the fire. In doing so, they present an opportunity for continued commerce (and Bob and Nikki interact chemically, or something; anyway, they both want to smooch).

Translator devices; direct-brain-interface learning machines; some other different super-advanced tech, but, this ISN'T a story about gadgets. Do you like...SPACE PIRATES?

It's a thorough romp, the first in the series, and it's my understanding that installment 11 has recently gone live. Amazing....

Peace be on your household.
Profile Image for Elliott Richards.
15 reviews
January 9, 2024


If you ever thought you wanted to write a book, but lacked confidence in your ability to do so, this is a prime example of anyone being capable of doing so. It doesn’t mean it will be good, though the bar is low enough that it will probably be better than this.

Pesky things such as formatting, pacing, chapters, showing and not telling, or even making characters clearly have any definable traits need not be done! Just throw piles of dialog together with the only details being dated references, two annoying nicknames, and repeated assurance that coffee is being made.

The best thing about this story is that I got the worst book I will read in 2024 out of the way already. It’s all uphill from here, baby!
250 reviews1 follower
February 9, 2021
Needs dialog tags and action beats

I had to stop reading 20% in. It is just blocks of dialog with nothing to support them. Maybe 1 in 15 blocks of dialog has tags and it feels like there are no action beats. I had to stop and reread sections at least 4 times to try to figure out what the hell they were talking about or the emotion that was meant to be expressed. A lot of the dialog is jokes or witty replies., and without dialog tags or action beats they do land. The story idea was ok, but the writing blew it for me.
1,419 reviews1 follower
Read
March 7, 2026
Rating: minus 15 on a scale of minus 15 to plus 5.

This made possible by YouTube - Doctor Who/Be Kind, LuckyBlackCat, Physics Girl, Keffals, Josh Johnson, A Cup of Nicole, The New Enlightenment with Ashley, Red Glasgow, Alex Fleev, FAFO, Emilie's Literary Corner, Queen Penguin, Trae Crowder, Quinn's Ideas, Hardy's Books, Combat Veteran News, Welcome to Ukraine,

Agro Squirrel Narrates, Matriarchetype, Fun Size Reader, Reese Waters, Books N Cats, Skip Intro, Kazachka, Ukraine Matters, It ain't half hot mum, Squire, Ms Modeller, NS Miniverse, Lily Simpson, Jake Broe, Dr Fatima, World Science Festival, Verilybitchie, British Museum, Mia Mulder, Sarah Millican, Ukraine Calling SOF UA,

Cruising Crafts, Boat Time, Well Deck Diaries, Ukrainian Jenny, The Activist Witch, Kiko1006- Empire of Angels, Kyiv Independent, Diary of a Ditch Witch, Deerstalker Pictures, Books with Chloe, Ode to Joy Flashmob, CBC News, House of El,

Widebeam and Wellingtons, Democratic Penguins Republic, Yarmak, Cambrian Chronicles, Times of India, Chloe Daniels, May's Narrowboat Life, Inside Russia, IL Neige, Kings and Generals, Springtime for Elon, Mercado Media, Jessica Kellgren Fozard, Lily Alexandre, Times Radio, Honest Government Ads,

Eugenia from Ukraine, Katy Montgomerie, Think That Through, Andrewism, Dr Tamitha Skov, Jean's Thoughts, Crow Caller, Up and Atom, The Ritual Kitchen with Laura May, Owen Jones, Tank Museum, Sanctioned Ivan, Valhalla Drums, The Great War, Philosophy Tube, Bobbing Along, Vlad Vexler, Jabzy, Retrofutura,

Keffals, Professor Gerdes Explains, Tallgirl6234, TriAngulum, League of STEAM, Riverboat Jack, Unlearning Economics, KernowDamo, ThePrimeChronus, Dylan Burns, Silicon Curtain, Storied, Monte Mader, Kasatka Inga, Amie's Literary Empire, Gingers are Black, Professor Tim Wilson, Eleanor Morton, Prime of Midlife, Guard the Leaf,

RevolutionarythOt, Maggie Mae Fish, Britta Bohler, Books and Things, Kozak Siromaha, The Scale Modeller, Energi Media, Ambient Infinity, Algal the Bard, Miracle Aligner, KernowDamo, Owen Jones, No Justice, Brigitte Empire, We Own It, Liz Webster, Farm to Taber, Dr Phoxotic, Baltic Defence Review.


I recently saw an idiot who whilst attacking an essayist complain to her that I list trans female creators. I can only guess the cause of the Snowflake epidemic (poorly socialised, barely educated, US tittie-baby). A trigger warning then.

I list channels with botanist, economist, bi, Welsh, socialist, boat restorer, sewist, anthropologist, lesbian, theoretical physicist, fabric maker, artist, older, intersex, news presenter, Australian, lumber yard worker, pensioner, cis, military boardgamer, WOC, fashion historian, political activist, trans, miniatures painter, sociologist, miniatures builder, military historian, communist, intersex, primatologist, queer, tall, language historian, English language instructor, German, asexual, redhaired, architect, caravan life, chemist, culture critic, comedienne, het, married, engineer, singer, Indian, cosplayer, archaeologist and other creators known as Women.

Almost as threatening to the Snowflake (insecure, arrogant, desperate fur relevance US baby-man) are channels with neurodivergent, Irish, other BIPOC, wood worker, other fashion historian, military analyst, tailor, miniatures wargamer, Canadian, other LGBTQIA, geopolitical analyst, boater, zoologist, ginger, mathematician, archaeologist, city planner, Ugandan, combat veteran, other fashion historian, miniatures landscape builder, paleontologist, photographer, Danish, other military historian, writer and other creators known (outside the US) as Human Beings.

If the voices still pressure, seek emergency therapy and\or develop a healthy hobby (assaulting women is mental illness not hobby) and\or seek the nearest Shinto temple.

My feelings towards these fellows is similar to that of the 13 Ukrainian marines defending Snake Island, when their surrender was demanded by the Russian navy. Their response was "Russian warship, go f@ck yourself." Glory to Ukraine. Glory to the Heroes. Crimea is Ukraine.

Once more, Unto the book, dear friends. When I first wrote this, I labelled this an old man's fantasy. It is much more and much less.

There is as usual for low end US science fiction almost a hint at a background universe. The book moves directly to a smug male fantasy. The unfolding of the main character's personality defects, social deficiencies and list of every negative trait assumed of a working class male are the world building.

The readers seem on the whole not those who consider themselves working class. The remainder are those readers, who are desperate for class representation in their fiction. I understand that last well enough.

I recommend better working class characters in the books of Massey, Ann Christy, Butcher, Weber, McCaffrey, Turtledove, Drake, Bujold-McMaster, Philip K Dick, Octavia Butler, Pournelle, Cherryh and others.

There are interesting films which do a decent job of discussing identity issues. "Smoke Signals", "Lars and the Real Girl", "Mumford", "Landscape with Invisible Hand", "Billy Elliot", "Little Boxes" are examples.

If his goal was to continue the denigration of myself and other readers for the entertainment of the middle class reader, he succeeded. I am not liking his purpose.

The working class white male in these books have no money concerns. The "alien" bride is a human woman who demonstrates a genetic predisposition to wasteful spending. That myth is alive and well in this and similar books.

The dialogue seems modelled on artificial "Duck Dynasty" interactions. I doubt that any of these readers have actually viewed the pre-launch photos of that cast or their backgrounds. The aliens also speak the same insane dialect because Reasons.

There is no explanation for the alien being in stasis or why rural US mechanics need instruct aliens in the use of the alien's own technology. It is another shot of anti-intellectualism. The same storytelling appears in most of these "libertarian" fantasies written for the low income white US male.

Apparently a sketch of a premise, a spaceship and at least one female character lacking in personality or agency and your book is chosen. Of course, the prose must be sufficiently coarse and to have never been subjected to editorial review. Overcoming the minor hurdles presupposes that your finished manuscript is not an actual space adventure but a clearly described political message.

Every libertarian speculative fiction writer should in my opinion, be tried for crimes against fiction.

Book Furnace made an interesting argument that the short story is an important tool for developing skill. They might then create personal histories and a development path for each. That does depend on a commitment to planning the book. My apologies, I drifted off into a fantastical dream in which a science fiction writer is proud of their work.


This next made possible by YouTube - Doctor Who\Without Reward, Adiemus -Carmina Slovenica, Dark Seas, Dark Docs, The Ministry of Miniatures, Dungeon Dad, Dungeons and Discourse, Legendary Tactics, Discourse Minis, Players Aid, NFKRZ, Natasha's Adventures, Hoots, Yanis Varoufakis, Shades of Orange,

OrangeRiver, Leena Norms, Bookslike Whoa, Kirkpattiecake, Cindy's Villa, Cold Fusion, Artur Rehi, The Book Leo, The Thought Spot, Kristine Vike, A Day of Small Things, The Cold War, Alina Gingertail, Tale Foundry, Oceanliner Designs, Depressed Russian, Casual Navigation, ILona Millinery, The Thinking Shop,

Ukraine: The Latest, Deerstalker Pictures, Travelling K, United24, Jen the Librarian, Roisin's Reading, Sarah Millican, RFU News, JimmyTheGiant, How to ADHD, Horses, Terrible Writing Advice, NerdForge, Ukraine News TV, Cecilia Blomdahl, Abney Park, Living Anachronism, Barry's Economics, ScaredKetchup,

Tanya Fiona, Ukraine News TV, JohnTheDuncan, Kyiv Post, Jake Broe, RFU News, Northern Narrowboaters, Narrowboat Pirate, Planarwalker, Gutsick Gibbon, Emma Thorne, The Resistance, Alt Shift X, Atun Shei Films, Postmodern Jukebox, Ask Raphaela, Dark Brandon, Anka Daily News, Tale Foundry,

Maggie Mae Fish, What Vivi did next, History of Everything, Real Time History. Kathy's Flog from France, Lynn Saga, Tod Maffin, The National, The Pioneer, CBC British Columbia, War and Politics 24, Rathbone, The Military Show, Political CUSTARD, Novara Media, No Justice, Sally's Economics, Sailing Melody.


The three current publisher categories for US science fiction are it seems, The No Effort, The Insulting and The Abhorrent.

After a time on Unlimited, I began to shy away from US print science fiction altogether, if written in the last fifteen years or so.

The streaming services do offer a superior product with decent cinematography at worst. YouTube have DUST, Omeleto and other short film channels which always deliver a superior story, quite of few of them excellent.

I began searching YouTube for science fiction recommendations a bit more than four years ago now. Discovering my first literary essayist, Lindsay Ellis 😍 led me to the book channels. 😍 They host communities of readers who are thoughtful, with varied interests but love all of the world of books. I promise that these are an experience far different to that of Amazon/Goodreads.

Consider treating this as a hostile site. 🤔

Goodreads discourse does not exist. As example, my last original review was a short and dismissive judgement of Powers of the Earth by a Travis Corcoran.

He self-described as libertarian (now anarcho capitalist without millions), veteran,

advocate for the return of chattel slavery (popular US position with new permanent forced labour prisons being constructed for the unhoused, van or auto dwelling and other citizens including children. With their existence now criminalised, there are no pathways to release. Given the cruelty foundational to US culture, its history and governments and some millions of citizens in open support of same, generational enslavement seems on the cards. With the disturbing line item of special furnaces for disposal of biologicals, Nazi population reduction schemes are a possibility.),

employee of an unnamed US agency, admirer of Putin's Russia (popular opinion with many barely literate citizens, the US government, Russian asset as head of US Intelligence among others, the recreation of that nation's incredible poverty, etc).

That book's story was of a rich twat enlisting the military in overthrow of a US government in order that he not pay taxes. I found that book and the many similar to be unhealthy, dangerous and now prophetic.

Travis and six fellow patriots objected strongly to my opinion. There followed a comment stream, running about a year. This was before I stumbled upon the correct American response "F*ck off, creep".

While there was nary a mention of the book, I was gifted instruction. My lack of response evidenced narcissism, my intelligence sorely lacking, women were incapable of appreciating real science fiction and other standard Goodreads insights.

Having lost hope of an answer to the question of Dark Matter, I was left with only the comfort of layers of irony.

The final comment was delivered by Claes Rees Jr aka cgr710 now ka Clayton R Jesse Jr.
After referencing the contents of the last message exchange with a friend, he declared in a comment that They had "won" (?).

I discovered that They had launched a deluge of truly vile sexual, racist and similar comments against channels which I mention, which comments continue still.

Surprisingly They failed to charm the boater, military historian, theoretical physicist, pensioner and the many other female creators.

They did however deliver an accurate self-portrait of the snowflake (twisted, woman fearing, arrogant, barely literate US tittie-baby, many university graduates) to a multinational audience and of course also increased the world's overabundance of ugliness. On balance quite the Victory.

Should the above disturb, there are BookTubers to guide the reader to safer, saner reader forums.


This last made possible by YouTube - Doctor Who\Be a Doctor, Snappy Dragon, Shelves with Samantha, Brittany Page, Dark Side of Russia, Historical Fashion, TimeGhost Army, Cappy Army, Wes O'Donnell, Mom on the Spectrum, The Confused Adipose, ScaredKetchup, A Very Casual Librarian, Anne Applebaum,

ATP Geopolitics, Think Ukraine, Queen City Minis, Ms Modeller, Malinda, Haropones, Katy Montgomerie, Andrewism, Gemma Dyer, Ember Green, Queer Kiwi, Karolina Zebrowska, Kaz Rowe, Bella Ciao - Nikolay Kutuzov, Matriarchetype, Delamer, Shades of Orange, Kozak Siromaha, Real Vintage Dolls house, Jormungandr.


Ominous music begins. 🙂 Comment gangs are prevalent in the Goodreads speculative fiction space but also romance and romantasy. Amazon do not acknowledge any incident nor discipline deranged readers, punish writers who organise Them or dismiss the employees who enabled both.

The activities of these muppets include the doxxing, stalking, hacking, threats and more.

After my review of Powers, my limited message history was given over to those mental members. The Australian Intelligence services performed a favour requested by Pine Gap Centre possibly on behalf of butthurt Travis. They attempted interrogation of the one friend whom I occasionally messaged. The attempt on my personal history failed.

Until we began publicising the event, Amazon were unconcerned. Then page format and options were returned to normal, Lurkers whom I had not been Allowed to remove were disappeared, intermittent bricking of my Kindle ended and the rest with only a note that Kindle no longer support Goodreads and icon removed.

A BookTuber finally loaded one of her typical reviews on Goodreads, which was deleted and membership threatened because of "Hate Speech". Writing racist, misogynistic or other in titles is acceptable, to write about those elements forbidden. Very American.

For her trouble she received her first Goodreads comment which suggested that she "should die".

Another BookTuber had her Kindle bricked and access to cloud library blocked. Her crime, challenging a double billing, obvious even in Amazon records.

Recently a seventh ex-employee of EBay was sentenced for months of harassment of a couple whose small ecommerce channel had been deemed unkind to EBay. The couple were awarded millions of pounds and that ex-employee had been the Chief of EBay Global Security. With the extended protections of US data firms, these are things to think about.

My suggestions for safety. Remove all personal information from Goodreads profile and avoid messaging. Remove lurkers, those who never post. They are likely monitors for gangs or employee dummies.

Given the Goodreads penchant for Altering customer pages, the screenshot of the odd, ugly and threatening are invaluable. These should suffice.

Kindle are the more serious. Do Not use Kindle Files, Calendar, Email or Contacts. Employees Sign Into customer emails without notice or permission. Make of that what you will.

Do Not "purchase" Amazon ebooks, as you own only the device and if Kindle that is conditional. If purchased, Download them immediately. There are BookTubers to direct you to other ebook and tablet vendors or alternatives to ebooks altogether.

All Silk searches should be innocuous and non-critical. Mention of Goodreads is part of the BookTuber's job but I no longer subscribe to those who gush over Kindle or Goodreads.

To implement these cost nothing but to not might well do. These disturbed nutcases are not restrained by any non-Randian morality, are cowardly and poorly socialised but members and employees alike are US patriots, with all that implies. Ominous music ends. 🙂

Be safe. May we all enjoy Good Reading! 😊


Some of my favourite YouTube channels.
National Centre for Military Intelligence, Russian Media Monitor, Zoe Baker, Alizee, The Stitchery, TVP News, aidan knight, Mrs Betty Bowers, Crow Caller, Kris Atomic, Driftwood Folk, Cruising Crafts, Ship Happens, Raw News and Politics, Alice Cappelle, Munecat, UATV English, Oliver Lugg, Monica Navarette,

Joe Blogs, The Closet Historian, SandRhoman History, Bobbing Along, MechWest Show, Bernadette Banner, Ash L G, Shannon Makes, Historical Fashion, Horses, A Day of Small Things, Ukraine News TV, Mythic Concepts, Savy Writes Books, Roomies Digest, Words Unravelled, Prime of Midlife, FaunTube,

Jean's Thoughts, Squire, Widebeam and Wellingtons, The Russian Dude, Its Black Friday, OliSUNvia, MinimaList, Jess of the Shire, Engineering Knits, Mythology and Fiction Explained, Eileen, Lady Knight the Brave, A Clockwork Reader, SciFi Odyssey, Erutan, Lady of the Library, Verilybitchie, Jake Broe,

Elina Charatsidou, AllShorts, Ponderful, The Book Leo, Alexa Donne, Sci-fi Secrets, JuLingo, Diane Callahan Quotidian Writer, The Science of Science Fiction, Dr Becky, Caitlin Doughty, Lindsay Ellis, Paleo Analysis, Planarwalker, Shaun, Dominic Noble, No Justice, Mandy, Cunk, The Historian's Craft, Kat Blacque,

Lilly's Life, A Life of Lit, Just Write, Interior Design Hub, Audrie Greywind, Lily Simpson, Puddles Pity Party, The Dadvocate, Rebecca Watson, Princess Weekes, Verilybitchie, Fantasy and World Music by the Fletchers, Dominic Noble, Acollierastro, Veritas et Caritas, HBomberGuy, Kat Abughazaleh, Leftist Cooks, Feral Historian,

Science Fiction with Damien Walter, Certifiably Ingame, Biz, Adult Wednesday Addams - 2 seasons, Library Ladder, Military History Visualized, Some More News, Geo Girl, Kelly Loves Physics and History, The Researcher, Heather Dale, Book Furnace, Part Time Hobbit, Mark R Largent, Zoe Bee.
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I wish you a wonderful morning, a splendid afternoon, a pleasant evening, a fantastic night and may we all continue learning.

That labelled Hate, is actually Contempt.
Observations, Thirteenth Route Trade Fleet
Profile Image for David.
612 reviews8 followers
Read
September 11, 2021
I saw this listed with SF comedy books. The dialog between characters (and occasionally narration) includes word play, teasing each other and repartee. I have to say, I was slow to catch some of the word play. The timing between hearing and "getting it" is important for appreciating humor. John said to Bob, "Were you too loose, Lautrec?" At that moment, it sank in just a little too late for me to smile. Maybe it was because I was listening to the book, maybe it was just me. Some dialog suggested there were references to TV or movie content I wasn't familiar with. The story can be entertaining, but in terms of comedy (that I was aware of) these dialog elements were the main comedy elements. Some readers might think the improbable plot points should be included.

Bob is a mechanic (?) One day he comes home and finds a flying saucer in his garage and an alien woman - Nikki - seeing if she can repair it. (The aliens look just like humans, can be treated with human-based medical care, and Earthlings and aliens end up being attracted to each other.) Bob quickly decides to help Nikki fix her saucer. Nikki was the pilot / guide who brought several alien grad students to Earth. When one of the grad students needs medical care, Bob brings in his friend John. John had been an army medic, but isn't licensed to practice medicine. John provides medical care outside official circles. This develops so that Nikki and her father arrange to have Bob and John run a secret-from-Earth-authorities business to provide repair and medical care to visiting aliens when needed.

The book is a short and easy read. For those who like it, there are lots of sequels.

Bob and John live in a small town, like guns, have a weekly paint-ball game, are friends with a cop but seem familiar / comfortable with various illegal activities, etc. Perhaps, it may appeal more to those more in tune with the portrayed culture.
Profile Image for Paul (Life In The Slow Lane).
908 reviews71 followers
May 5, 2023
MacGyver Meets Alien Dudette...and If You Like It, Put A Ring On It. DNF at 50%

This is what happens when you don't have any chapters, no character description, stupid plot, ridiculous happenings, all dialogue, and the dialogue is all blokey slang with lots of 70s movie references...you make Paul (me) an unhappy little Aussie. (Except for the reference to a certain Burt Reynolds movie I like, so one extra star for that.)

Lucky this book was in my Kindle, otherwise I would have hoiked it out the back door onto the compost pile. I need a G&T.

EDIT: If you're wondering: It was "White Lightning" from 1973 starring Burt Reynolds and Jennifer Billingsley.
Profile Image for Nikkorkat.
30 reviews
November 12, 2022
If I could give negative stars, I would. The book reads like it's the tenth in the series instead of the first, and I'm still not convinced the author didnt simply post a 12-year old's alien fan fiction. Everything happens conveniently and without conflict, every other paragraph has the main characters calling each other "space cadet" and "caveman," and everyone swears by saying "snagfart."

I stopped reading after I read this on page 56: “Naughty Space Cadet! Daddy spank.”

The only thing I hate more than this book is myself for reading 56 pages of it.
1 review
December 12, 2022
Like many others, I wanted to like this book. I thought it would be a fun book but it irritated me a lot. The dialogue didn’t sound natural. Also, the main characters constantly called each other by their pet names: caveman and space cadet, just Argh! I have a rule about quitting books, so started skimming the text. No descriptive text, so things just happen without any build up. Sexist stereotypes, even though you can tell he tried not to…
Profile Image for Anita.
2,851 reviews182 followers
July 13, 2023
I hated this audiobook so much so that I gave up really early on. The protagonist is the cliched genius everyman - a man easily mistaken for nothing special, but who is wildly intelligent, talented, and humble. There's a whole lot of humble-bragging. So much I couldn't take it anymore. The concept is an auto mechanic fixing a space ship that just happened to park in his home garage.
Profile Image for Louise Pass.
283 reviews2 followers
November 15, 2019
First contact.

Light hearted, tongue in cheek, first contact story the story is told from mostly first person reports of two good old boys out of the military.
Profile Image for Keith.
2,197 reviews6 followers
July 22, 2020
Not Exactly What Was Expected

A delightful word salad jumble of Sci-fi, pop culture and irreverent humor. While a bit confusing at times, this was still a light, fun read.
29 reviews
March 14, 2021
This book must have been written by an adolescent for an adolescent. Read the one and two star reviews. I'm not wasting my time reviewing this in depth.
Profile Image for William.
450 reviews1 follower
October 3, 2021
Meh

Story lacks depth, and believability, especially in context of the genre. A shell of dialogue, skimming necessary. If food, it’d be gas station food.
41 reviews
February 22, 2023
DNF
Definitely NOT for young adults, or anyone for that matter. Constant swearing and foul language. Sexual references
Profile Image for Ashling.
103 reviews
January 15, 2025
Not a good book. The writing was not great and there was too much dialogue. Also a little sexist. “Well, you’re a female, and you admitted I wasn’t wrong, I just want a record”. ????? BOOOOO
Profile Image for Judy.
19 reviews2 followers
August 19, 2024
Interesting premise....

Although I was intrigued by the premise, I found the juvenile behavior and banter of supposed adults very off-putting. A few grammatical errors (the past tense of drag is dragged, not drug) is probably an editing issue. Otherwise, it was a quick read. I may try the second volume but if the characters don't start acting like real people, it will be my last.
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