To Captain Tayne Sondar, a man’s moral code is as unalterable as the stars. At least, that’s what he thought...
When a daring rescue attempt goes wrong, Tayne finds himself trapped in an underwater prison from which there is no escape.
But then, Veta Kool - owner of the prison and operator of the biggest smuggling operation in the Known Universe - offers Tayne a deal. And all Tayne has to do is break one of his deeply held principles.
The only problem is, it’s the last principle he’d ever want to break.
Burn is the fourth book in the Star Inferno series. If you like weird, alien mind parasites, floating islands and board game-based assassination plots, this book has got you covered. Pick up Burn today, and you’ll soon be turning the pages like your fingertips were on fire.
Hadwin Fuller is the author of the space opera series Star Inferno. He writes sci-fi novels packed to the air seals with blaster brawls, space dogfights and misfit crews of loveable weirdos who are forced to band together to save the universe.
Like most sci-fi writers, Hadwin is the victim of a misspent youth (he blames his parents) in which his head was buried far too often in sci-fi novels and far too rarely in schoolbooks. It is from this vast expanse of wasted time that he channels his inner sci-fi writer.
Hadwin lives in Vietnam with his wife, newborn baby and robot vacuum cleaner. When he’s not pressing his eyeballs up against the display of his e-reader, Hadwin can be found blasting around town on his motorbike, loafing around in coffee shops and eating his way through every Vietnamese food they have a name for.
Great, albeit a little over the top, sci fi fantasy adventure
The worldbuilding is especially zany in Burn, Cat makes an awesome friend, and there is a great deal of destruction and gross space monsters. I really like Tayne, but he was not as likeable for part of Burn. I am enjoying this series, but the next book takes place in a Chubwubber colony, which seems more like horror than fantasy.