Jace and Loren fought hard to restore Katrijn to the throne, yet here they are, stranded in a far off land with no one to trust and a broken-down ship.
They’re trapped, helpless, and with no one left to turn to.
They need to find a way back home, no matter what the cost, all while fugitives from humanity’s two warring sides entrenched in different parts of the galaxy.
The only way home? Through Ganymede’s Gate.
The third installment of the Andlios series, for fans of tense ship battles and daring feats, because everyone loves a hero willing to risk it all to beat the odds.
Dave Walsh was once the world's foremost kickboxing journalist, if that makes any sense. He's still trying to figure that one out.
The thing is, he always loved writing and fiction was always his first love. He wrote 'Godslayer' in hopes of leaving the world of combat sports behind, which, as you can guess, did not exactly work. That's when a lifelong love of science fiction led him down a different path.
Now he writes science fiction novels about far-off worlds, weird technology and the same damned problems that humanity has always had, just with a different setting.
He does all of this while living in the high desert of Albuquerque and raising twin boys with his wife. He's still not sure which is harder: watching friends get knocked out or raising boys.
After finishing a book, I was scrolling through my phone looking for my next book amongst my TBRs and I discovered that – for some reason – I owned book 2 in this series. Why? No idea.
I've enjoyed other works by Walsh, so decided to give this one a go. I figured if it didn't make sense, I could put it back down. But it did so I didn't.
Kat's efforts to claim the throne of Andlios failed but, with the help of Jace and Loren, she escaped. Now the three are trapped in our solar system, far away from home and desperate to get back.
The book pulled me in and kept me reading.
One star off due to two minor points. 1. There are frequent long chains of dialogue with no tags or indicators of who's speaking. Quite often, I had no idea who was speaking. Even counting the lines only works in conversations between two parties. 2. As a whole, the book stands nicely on its own two feet for a reader who hasn't read the first or read it some time ago. However, the ending makes zero sense, presumably because it refers back to the first novel. But brings in a whole new cast of characters without introductions.
After confronting her brother and barely getting out with their skins Kat Jace and company escape to the Sol system and after making new friends (and enemies) find their way home to find much has changed .
Wow! I'm so glad that I decided to give the second book in this series a chance! This was so much better than the first. There was a ton of action and drama. I'm definitely reading the next one.