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Orbits: The Ables, Book 4

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Fifteen years after the events of Currents, a new generation of Ables--including Phillip and Emmaline's kids, Emily and Henry--are learning to navigate their powers and beginning to understand what it takes to be a hero.A new killer is threatening the custodian world: a strange blood disease that only targets those with custodian DNA. The disease is wiping out the older population of heroes, and doctors are far from understanding it, let alone curing it. Overcome with fear that the disease will cause custodians to become extinct, the humans begin ramping up military spending, straining relations between humans and custodians. Phillip comes under fire as one of the most visible and important custodial board members, and hope looks slim when Phillip's father is diagnosed with the disease. Phillip, Emmaline, and the other Ables are caught between the crumbling society of custodians while protecting and raising their fledgling-hero kids. But Emily, Henry, and their friends have plans of their own to help their parents, and begin following clues left in a notebook written by Bentley Crittendon with the belief it will lead them to his secret lab where the cure is. The problem? A group of masked custodians are after it too, and they're willing to do anything to get to it first. In the epic conclusion to The Ables series, three generations of Ables must unite in the race to uncover the secret lab--and the madman who created the disease, who is bent on destroying them all.

184 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 8, 2022

1 person is currently reading
32 people want to read

About the author

Jeremy Scott

7 books258 followers
Jeremy Scott is a writer and entertainer from Nashville, TN. He is the co-creator & narrator of CinemaSins, a YouTube channel dedicated to movie-related comedy that has amassed over 3.8 million subscribers in under 2 years' time. A former online marketing consultant, Jeremy spends his time writing, being sarcastic, and greenly hoping to find a good laugh once a day.

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5 stars
8 (17%)
4 stars
15 (33%)
3 stars
14 (31%)
2 stars
7 (15%)
1 star
1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for M.K. Bingman.
Author 3 books9 followers
February 11, 2023
Great series, great job

This was a wonderful series and book. I was slightly disappointed that there wasn't a cameo from Donnie at some point in this story but other than that it was tied together masterfully.
Profile Image for emily_oriley.
380 reviews2 followers
November 9, 2022
I needed to sit with this for a while before doing this review.

The story itself is a little outlandish—especially when you compare it to the other three books. I was a little thrown off by not only the massive jump in time but the fast-forwarding through some fairly extreme world-building. On the one hand, I can understand why Jeremy Scott chose not to walk us through the hows and the whys of the world ending up the way it did since (at least in America) we basically tiptoed into this worst case scenario for four years. Which, sadly, makes this sort of thing go from bonkers-ass-crazy to plausible.

On the other hand, it does make the story feel a little empty in places. Like joining a show a two or three episodes in—not enough to be completely lost but you kinda regret not starting it from the beginning. It also felt too short and a little rushed while still having moments that felt like filler that, honestly, didn’t really impact the plot other than delaying the characters’ progression.

Now, as far as the characters and the writing and the overall tone: all just as perfect as the others in the series. Natural progression and growth even with that long gap in the timeline. The humor was spot on as always and the respect paid to mental / emotional health was wonderful.

My biggest issue with this story is Boss Hogg and his Chairface plan with the moon. Now, I read comic books so I’ve seen some wacky supervillain stuff but this was a little too cartoony even for me.

Honestly, while I love these characters and was happy to spend as little time as them as this book allotted, I don’t think this story was needed. I think it would have been okay to leave it at the third book. But I’m also not mad that this does exist.

For the record, I’m only giving this four stars because of Pluto.
Profile Image for Daryl.
62 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2024
As a Special Education teacher, I loved this series about a group of superheroes with disabilities. It’s great for young people with disabilities to know that differently abled folks are heroes too!

That said, this final book felt rushed and left me somewhat unsatisfied and a little disappointed. It just didn’t appeal to me as strongly as the previous books in the series. I would have loved a longer book with a stronger finish than Scott gave us.

Disappointment notwithstanding, I’m glad the author wrote this series and I hope more authors will follow his lead. Representation matters!
Profile Image for A.M. Molloy.
Author 1 book13 followers
January 6, 2023
It was great to return to the world of The Ables. It was a conclusion I didn't know I needed since I found the third book to have a great ending. Even if the third ended perfectly, I knew I still wanted more of this series, and Scott delivered with a great new edition. Maybe someday we'll see more of this world through the eyes of Philips kids, but for now, I'm glad to have seen it through his eyes one more time.
Profile Image for Mason.
106 reviews
October 22, 2022
I enjoyed Orbits, but not as much as previous books in the series. I like to read fantasy/sci-fi to detach from the world and I felt this book took too much inspiration from events over the past few years. Jeremy is one of those must read authors for me. I’m glad for the time spent with the Ables, but it will hurt to see them go
Profile Image for Aaron Coumos.
17 reviews
November 22, 2022
Rounding up from 3.5

Not sure why this one is so short (almost exactly half the length of the first book), and with such a large time jump, it could've used some extra time fleshing out the changes to the world.

Overall, absolutely ridiculous plot, but works within the series somehow. It will be sad to not have more stories with these characters.
Profile Image for Yann.
49 reviews
July 11, 2023
3,5-4 stars.
A satisfying ending for the series. Blasted through it. Sometimes it felt a bit rushed but Jeremy stayed true to the characters and their histories.
Good series!
9 reviews
May 10, 2024
I love this series… but

This series is one of my faves. I wish they would make it into a movie. This final chapter if it is that just felt rushed. He used to in the other books go into great detail about the heist. This book it was just they went here did the thing and was back. I know it’s hard to Nerf a teleported or speedster, so I get it but what always made these stories so appealing was the handicap angle. All the heroes pretty much have either lost their handicap due to technology or just don’t seem to have it any more. So it just became a regular normal superhero romp. Which is fine but you look to this series to see them overcome their supposed disadvantages while succeeding.
Profile Image for Davis Dunkleberger.
19 reviews
May 6, 2025
A good conclusion to the Ables series but the book is flawed. None of the heroes have the disabilities that made the series unique. The story is well done and run family element is nice. I would’ve liked some more explanation of where Em was during this time. I also felt some descriptions of the villain were a bit on the nose for a political figure. It just took me out of the world. A good series that ends well, but this book is the weakest of the four in my eyes.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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