Showing posts with label Scott Baron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Baron. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Rise of the Forgotten - Scott Baron

   2021; 363 pages.  Book 3 (out of 6) in the “Warp Riders” series.  New Author? : Yes.  Genres : Space Opera; Science Fiction; Space Exploration.  Overall Rating: 7½*/10.

 

    First the good news.  Nobody’s shooting at Sadira Perez’s spaceship anymore; their galactic enemies, the Ra’az Hok, have been vanquished; and their former taskmasters, the Chithiid, are now their allies.  So they’re relatively safe for the time being,

 

    Now for the bad news.  Sadira’s ship and crew have been warped to who-knows-where, which has rendered their star charts useless.  Once you’re become lost in the universe you tend to stay lost.

 

    However, the ship’s AI reports that’s there’s a planet up ahead, and it’s inhabited.  Chances are the beings are either human or Chithiid.  Maybe they have star charts of this part of the galaxy, and if so, maybe they’ll let Sadira take a look at them.

 

    Yeah, and maybe Murphy, he of “Murphy’s Law”, won’t pay them a surprise visit, as he is wont to do.

 

What’s To Like...

    Rise of the Forgotten is the third book in Scott Baron’s “Warp Riders” series.  He’s written five series in this setting, 32 books in all, and has posted a useful timeline of these on his Amazon webpage showing the chronology of these series.

 

    This series follows the Clockwork Chimera” one, which I’ve read and reviewed in its entirety over the last four years.  That one chronicled the war between the Ra’az Hok and the Humans; this series focuses on the aftermath.  Sadira’s crew is still intact, and includes a pleasant mix of humans, cyborgs, Chithiids, and gender-juggling AI entities. 

 

    Rise of the Forgotten is a fine example of both Space Opera and First Contact genres.  Making contact with this unknown planet is desperately necessary, but prudence is required.  Are they friends or enemies?  Are the Ra’az Hok truly eliminated, or do pockets of them remain on far-flung solar systems?  Might the inhabitants down there know how to get back to Planet Earth or will they shoot first and ask questions later?

 

    To no one’s surprise, Sadira’s "first contact" strategy rapidly gets derailed, with thrills, spills, and mayhem all rapidly ensuing.  I read the Books 1&2 in this series back in 2021 so I very much appreciated the first couple of chapters giving a recap of events in those volumes.  I also enjoyed watching the creation of the “disguises” to be used to infiltrate into the planet’s inhabitants and chuckled over the acronym “ASAFP”.

 

    The ending is decent but not very twisty; tense but not very exciting.  Good triumphs over Evil, but some of Sadira’s objectives remain unfulfilled.  Oh well, there are another three books in the series to deal with that.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon: 4.6*/5, based on 145 ratings and 14 reviews.

    Goodreads: 4.43*/5, based on 76 ratings and 11 reviews.

 

Excerpts...

    “He’ll be okay, Cap.  Hel’s a pain in the ass sometimes, but he’s no fool.”

    “He ditched his comms, Moose.  And we have no way to find either of them now.  It’s thousands of Chithiid, all dressed the same, all packed in there, and even if we knew roughly where he was, we can’t even get a clear visual from up here because of the atmospheric issues.”

    “I know, I know.  But it’s like taking a kid riding without training wheels.  Eventually, you have to trust them and let go.”

    She raised an eyebrow sarcastically.  “Most kids crash the first time, you know.”  (loc. 1592)

 

    “Things don’t always go according to plan, but if anyone’s going to take a risky gamble, I suppose the AI superbrain that processes data a bazillion times faster than any of us meat brains can is about the best odds you can get.”

    “Did you just call me a meat brain?” Moose asked.

    “Well, technically, it’s neurons, glial cells, neural stem cells, and blood vessels in addition to fat, but I think the spirit of the comment is valid,” Hump said with a laugh.  (loc. 4698)

 

Kindle Details…

    Rise of the Forgotten sells for $3.99 right now at Amazon.  The other books in the series, including the Book 1&2 bundle, go for either $0.99 or $3.99.  Scott Baron has several other series in e-book format, both in bundles and as individual stories, and mostly priced in the $0.99-$4.99 range.

 

“Smoke me a kipper, I’m heading home.”  (loc. 738)

    I counted 11 instances of profanity in the first 10% of Rise of the Forgotten, which I’d call a moderate amount.  None of them were f-bombs, but a couple of those did show up later on.  I don’t recall any adult situations.

 

    There’s not much else to quibble about.  There were no slow spots in the storytelling, but it was a quick-&-easy read, ideal for a day at the beach.  And maybe it even suggests a subtle concept: that regardless of ethnic, cosmic, and/or gender varieties, when it comes to surviving in the Universe, we are all in this together.  Now onto Book Four, Pandora’s Menagerie.

 

    7½ Stars.  One last thing.  My favorite cosmic deity, the Flying Spaghetti Monster, gets a brief nod here, and as a loyal FSM follower, I found that greatly satisfying.

Friday, July 19, 2024

Daisy's War - Scott Baron

   2018; 366 pages.  Book 5 (out of 5) in the series “The Clockwork Chimera”.  New Author? : No.  Genre : Space Opera; Alien Invasion Sci-Fi.  Overall Rating : 7½*/10.

 

    The first phase of the Great War is complete: Planet Earth has been liberated!  Now it’s time for phase two, the liberation of the Chithiid home planet Taangaar.

 

    The battle lines are drawn.  On one side are the Humans, the Cyborgs, and several AI’s operating spaceships.  Plus some Chithiid “rebels”, freed from their forced slavery when Earth was retaken, and ready to mete out some revenge.

 

    On the other side are the countless hordes of the Ra’az Hok bad guys plus a whole bunch of Chithiid “loyalists”, whose families are being held hostage by the Ra’az Hok.  Past experience has shown that the baddies will not hesitate to slaughter any and all captives for the slightest reasons.

 

    Both sides have some hidden resources up their sleeves.  Interestingly, some hidden assets of the good guys are even being kept secret from the rest of the good guys.  I wonder how that’s going to play out.

 

What’s To Like...

    Daisy’s War is the fifth, and final book in Scott Baron’s “Clockwork Chimera” series, wherein he faced a daunting task: to bring together a bunch of characters scattered throughout the galaxy (including the mysterious wunderkind Arlo), consolidate the forces of Good and then purge the baddies from two armed-to-the-teeth and hostile planets (if the Ra’az home planet can even be located), resolve the Sarah/Sarah dichotomy (say what?), and finally, give Daisy a much-needed rest.  Oh yeah, and accomplish this in less than 400 pages.

 

    Missions accomplished.

 

    It wasn’t easy.  It takes time for the armies and spaceships of the good guys to gather together into one cohesive fleet.  Warp drives can be persnickety and fragile.  AI’s may be super-intelligent but sometimes they're a bit lacking in common sense.  And while the Ra’az Hok may be slightly (but only slightly) behind technology-wise, they make up for that by having a decided numerical advantage in spaceships and fighting personnel.

 

    It was fun to see the Daisy/Sarah arrangement (cue the Pink Floyd lyrics “there’s someone in my head, but it’s not me”) finally be revealed to other interested parties.  Ditto for the Sarah/Finn relationship.  Several deceased characters for earlier books are surprisingly resuscitated, thanks to the AI smarts.  One of them plays a vital role in determining who wins and who loses.

 

    I enjoyed the tie-ins to at least three movies: Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure, The Terminator, and Back to the Future.  I have no doubt that Scott Baron's cinematic tastes are stellar.  The Fibonacci Spiral getting worked into the story was also a nice touch.  I’ll even look the other way about the one Hydrogen and two Oxygen molecules getting together to form water.  The ratio is the other way around, and they’re atoms, not molecules.

 

    Everything builds to a suitably exciting climax, where the tides of war swing from one side to the other a couple times before finally settling out.  The final chapter is in a “whatever happened to…” format, and I thought it was a fine way to end this saga.  The war is over, Earth begins to slowly rebuild itself, and some of the series' characters retire to start families.  Things close with a couple of heartwarming plot twists.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon:  4.6/5 based on 446 ratings and 45 reviews.

    Goodreads: 4.43/5 based on 369 ratings and 39 reviews.

 

Kewlest New Word ...

Janky (adj.) : of poor quality; unreliable.

 

Excerpts...

    “You were dead, man.” Omar replied.

    “I know.  Bummer, right?”

    “So now you’re a computer?”

    “Technically, a one-of-a-kind AI, if you want to get nitpicky about it,” he replied.  “But there’s something I need to ask you all, and I need you to be upfront.”

    “Of course,” Sarah said.  “What is it, Gus?”

    Their AI friend paused for a moment for effect.

    “Be honest.  Does this ship make me look fat?”  (loc. 23121)

 

    “So how did you do it?”

    “Here’s the thing, Captain.  Sometimes, well, things just aren’t quite what they seem.  And other times, they’re exactly what they seem, but even then they might not be.”

    “I’m not following you,” he said, confused.

    By the expressions on everyone present’s faces, he wasn’t alone in that regard.

    “Okay, I’ll break it down as basically as I can, but forgive me if I slip into a tangent here and there.  It’s been a long day, and I’m wicked sleep-deprived.”

    “Aren’t we all?” Celeste said with a little laugh.  (loc. 24304)

 

Kindle Details…

    Daisy’s War is priced at $3.99 at Amazon right now.  The other four books in the series are all in the $0.99-$3.99 range, and there is a 5-book bundle, comprising the entire series, for only $7.99, which is the format I’m reading.

 

“Basically, you downloaded yourself to yourself just before you blew yourself up.”  (loc. 20003)

    The profanity rate continues its steady decline for the series, which is a plus.  I counted just 11 cusswords in the first four chapters (ergo, 10% of the 40 chapters) of the book.  Previous cuss rates for the first 10% were 15 (Book 4), 20 (Book 3), 15½ (Book 2, extrapolated), and 27 (Book 1).


    There were a couple typos, such as clean-off/clean off; they/the; and queens/queen’s, but they weren’t a distraction.

 

    My gripes were the usual for this series.  Clockwork Chimera is first and foremost a Space Opera series.  Yet too many pages are devoted to making plans and discussing relationships, particularly in the first parts of each installment.  Here, the first eleven chapters dragged for me.

 

    To be fair, once the plans are set and the attacks get underway, there’s action aplenty.  Alas, dei ex machina (the plural of deus ex machina.  I had to look that up.) arise all too frequently.  One unexpected miracle is okay.  Maybe even two.  Here there were six.  That’s way too many.

 

    But these are personal opinions only.  If you happen to like your Sci-Fi Adventure-Intrigue stories heavy on the Intrigue, you’re going to love this series.  Ditto if your heroes get rescued time and time again by incredibly-timed luck.


    So just put your thinking brain to sleep and enjoy a story about Daisy and her friends saving Planet Earth, Planet Taangaar, and the rest of the Universe to boot.  You'll still be entertained.  I was.

 

    7½ Stars.  Scott Baron has penned at least four other Sci-fi Space Opera series, and this is the first one I’ve read to completion.  Up next is the Deep Space Boogie series, which I started reading a couple years back, by getting drawn in by Daisy’s adventures.

Monday, March 18, 2024

Chasing Daisy - Scott Baron

   2018; 384 pages.  Book 4 (out of 5) in the series “The Clockwork Chimera”.  New Author? : No.  Genre : Space Opera; Alien Invasion Sci-Fi.  Overall Rating : 7½*/10.

 

    It’s time to finish the task. 

 

    With Daisy’s crucial help, the ragtag crew of humans, Chithiids, cyborgs, and Artificial Intelligences have sent the alien Ra’az baddies, who were in the process of stripping Earth of all its natural resources, fleeing in their spaceships to somewhere on the other side of the galaxy.

 

    Next up is the liberation of the Chithiids’ home planet, Taangaar.  Then it’s on to Ra’azengar, the home planet of the baddies.

 

    There are a couple things holding up progress.  First, no one is exactly sure of where the Ra’az home planet is, and the universe is a hugely big place to go searching blindly.  Even more importantly, Daisy and her friends don’t possess warp-drive technology.  Without that, trying to fly somewhere thousands of lightyears away will take . . . erm . . . thousands upon thousands of years.

 

    Maybe we should have some of the AI beings work on that.  Unless someone can think of a quicker way of gaining that technology.

 

What’s To Like...

    Chasing Daisy is the fourth book in Scott Baron’s (completed) “Clockwork Chimera” series.  The first half of the book dovetails with the neat plot twist at the end of Book 3, wherein Daisy learns that Quantum Physics predicts that, theoretically, not only can you instantly jump from one place in the universe to any other site, but you can also travel from one time to another just as easily.

 

    The first half of Chasing Daisy consists of her, Freya, and Sarah learning to function on a different timeline.  Like all conscientious time-travelers, they do their best to avoid creating temporal paradoxes, but their track record in this regard is less than perfect.  Indeed, they get quite adept at “correcting” earlier plotline anomalies, such as the “mysterious sniper” that Finn and his group encountered, a while back in the past, while doing a recon mission in Rome.

 

    Every reader of time-travel novels knows that such timeline alterations mean that Daisy’s triad risks being blipped out of existence at any moment.  Fortunately, History apparently is quite able to adjust to such things, albeit occasionally having to create anomalies like two “yous”.  See first excerpt, below.

 

    The multiple-timeline issues are eventually resolved, and the second half of the book focuses on the efforts by Daisy and the Dark Side personnel (at a surviving space base on the far side of the moon) to organize, and rally the disparate factions of inhabitants, both organic and inorganic, to unite in what, sadly, may well be a suicide mission.

 

    The ending is adequate, given that this is an “in-between” book, and should not be read as a standalone tale.  The good guys are poised to attempt to liberate the Chithiid homeworld, and I liked that the bad guys have some tricks up their sleeve as well.  Things once again close with a deft little plot twist that I didn’t see coming and which I’m sure will impact our heroes’ chances of success against the Ra’az.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon:  4.6/5 based on 388 ratings and 30 reviews.

    Goodreads: 4.39/5 based on 333 ratings and 32 reviews.

 

Excerpts...

    I still don’t think she believes you about me, though.

    “I know, but she will.”

    “You talking to the invisible me again?” Sarah asked, her doubting eyebrow held in a high arch.

    “Told ya so.

    “But she’s real,” Freya interjected.  “She’s you, Sarah.  Well, not you, you, but you who has experienced what the other you hasn’t.”

    She stared at Daisy disbelievingly.

    “Do you guys really expect me to believe you have a little piece of me living in your head?”  (loc. 15939)

 

    “Hi, Finn,” Sarah said, stepping out from behind a large equipment mover.

    The jovial chef nearly choked on his cookie in shock.  The other Vali crew were likewise floored by her sudden appearance.

    “But…” Doctor McClain managed to blurt while the rest of the crew remained stunned and speechless.

    “But I’m dead.  Yeah, I know,” Sarah said with a little laugh.  “And let me tell you, being dead sucks.”  (loc. 17648)

 

Kindle Details…

    Chasing Daisy costs $3.99 at Amazon right now.  The other four books in the series are each in the $0.99-$3.99 range, and there is also a bundle of all five books for only $7.99, which is the format I’m reading.

 

“Fire it up, Freya.  Let’s do the time warp again.”  (loc. 15234)

    There’s a moderate amount of profanity.  I noted 15 instances in the first 10% (first 4 chapters, actually) of the book, which is fairly normal for this series.

 

    Once again, the ”Planning-versus-Doing Ratio” is heavily weighted towards the former.  But I suspect this is inevitable for any “in-between” book in a series.   And kudos to whoever did the editing on Chasing Daisy.  I noted only two typos, both of the effect/affect ilk, which is always a tough call.

 

    These are quibbles.  I’m enjoying The Clockwork Chimera series, but I’ve yet to figure out what that series' title references.  And yes, this is your typical “save the post-apocalyptic world” storyline, but somehow Scott Baron is managing to put a unique spin on that trope.

 

    Everything is now set for the ultimate showdown with the Ra’az.  I’m eager to see what the Planning-versus-Doing Ratio will be for the final installment in this series, Daisy’s War.  And to repeat, I strongly recommend investing in the 5-book bundle detailed above.  This is one series that's definitely better when read in order.

 

    7½ Stars.  Oh yeah, one last thing.  One of the plot threads in Chasing Daisy is left unresolved.  A fascinating character named Arlo makes a grand entrance around the halfway point of the book, bearing an urgent message for Daisy.  But who is he, how did he know where to find Daisy, who sent him, and is he a White Hat or a Black Hat?  I am looking forward to finding out in the next book.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Daisy's Gambit - Scott Baron

   2018; 342 pages.  Book 3 (out of 5) in the series “The Clockwork Chimera”.  New Author? : No.  Genre : Space Opera; Alien Invasion Sci-Fi.  Overall Rating : 7½*/10.

 

    Arise, ye Earthlings and Chithiids!  And arise ye Cyborgs and even ye AI units!  You have nothing to lose but your chains!

 

    Well, you also have your lives to lose, since you’ll be going up against the dreaded Ra’az Hok, the destroyers of Earth and enslavers of the Chithiid.  Their technology is superior and their forces are far more powerful than anything we good guys can muster.

 

    But they have one weakness: their home planet is many light years away, and their communications and supply lines between there and planet Earth are vulnerable.  They’re aware of that and they’re in the process of developing a super-fast warp drive.  That project is just about completed.

 

    So despite the long odds of success, now is the time to revolt.  And we just might be victorious if our war plan goes perfectly.

 

    In other words, we’re doomed.

 

What’s To Like...

    Daisy’s Gambit is the third book in Scott Baron’s “Clockwork Chimera” series.  As given below, the author offers the complete series as a 5-book bundle for a very reasonable price, and occasionally discounts it.  I recommend investing in the bundle, since I think this is a series where a lot is lost if you don’t read the books in order.

 

    The action starts immediately, literally in the first sentence, and is a logical follow-up to previous book, wherein the seeds of revolt were first sown.  Now it’s time for the four subjugated races—Chithiids, Cyborgs, Humans, and Artificial Intelligences—to join forces and learn to trust each other.  This is no small task, given that there are some amongst them who are still loyal to the Ra’az Hok.

 

    I liked that the personnel at the good guys' moon base still play a key role in the storyline, even though the settings in Daisy's Gambit are exclusively at various locations on Earth.  The key players include Freya, the juvenile AI that Daisy discovered during her lunar sojourn, and who is imbued with equal amounts of learning ability and naivete.

 

    The ending is laced with exciting fight scenes and resolves the main storyline of attacking the Ra’az communication hubs and warp drive research facility.  Some good guys perish, a deus ex machina pops up to save the day, Daisy and Vince are reunited, and all the surviving Terrans now await the enemy’s inevitable counterpunch.  Things close with a teaser for the next book, Chasing Daisy.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon:  4.6/5 based on 478 ratings and 36 reviews.

    Goodreads: 4.38/5 based on 397 ratings and 35 reviews.

 

Kewlest New Word ...

Shemagh (n.) : a headcloth commonly worn in the desert (google-image it).

 

Excerpts...

    “Enter the code 011235813.  The base is on a swivel, and once unlocked, the mechanism will allow you to slide it aside to descend into the facility.  You are ready with the specs on which explosives and detonators to gather, yes?”

    “Yeah, we have all the info, but hang on.  Isn’t that code a bit obvious?”

    “Not to those who do not follow mathematics,” he replied.  (loc. 12018)

 

    “My sword’s a bit of a psychopath,” she said with a grim chuckle as she pulled the blade free from the alien’s chest.  She watched as the last drops absorbed into the surface, leaving the pristine white blade as good as new once again.

    “You like that thing a bit too much,” Sarah quipped.  “You’re not going to be one of those douches who names their sword, are you?”

    “I wasn’t going to,” Daisy joked back.  “But now that you mention it, I think I shall hereafter call it Stabby McStabberton.”

    “Oh God, you’re ridiculous.”

    “Don’t listen to her, Stabby.”  (loc. 13736)

 

Kindle Details…

    Daisy’s Gambit is priced at $3.99 at Amazon right now.  The other four books in the series are all in the $0.99-$3.99 price range, and there is a 5-book bundle, containing the entire series, for only $7.99, which is the format I’m reading.

 

“Who would have thought an artificially intelligent dishwasher would ever fly a warship?”  (loc. 13198)

    There are some nits to pick.  There were 20 cusswords in the first 10% of the book, which is about normal for this series, and Daisy and Vince celebrate their reacquaintance with appropriate ardor.

 

    Once again, not all of the plotlines are resolved.  Something or someone is butchering the wild bears in Colorado, but who-or-what did it is never revealed.  Ditto for the helpful-but-unseen counter-sniper in Rome.  Inquiring minds want to know the answers to these mysteries, and presumably both of them get addressed in the remaining two books in the series.

 

    There are a couple of the kind of spellchecker typos that usually arise in Indie author books, such as berg/burg, world/word, and tell-tale/telltale.  But these were rare enough to not be a distraction.

 

    For me, the main issue was the Planning-to-Doing Ratio.  A lot more pages were devoted to the former than to the latter.  But if the “Intrigue” half of the genre “Action-Intrigue” is your preferred cup of tea, you will thoroughly enjoy Daisy’s Gambit.  This kind of plan-vs-do ratio holds true for the middle book(s) of many series.  I remember thinking the same thing about The Two Towers in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy.

 

    Overall, Daisy’s Gambit still had enough wit, character-development, and world-building to keep my interest.  After all, overthrowing evil galactic powers takes careful planning, and that’s what is going on here.

 

    7½ Stars.  We'll close with one last nod to the clever password 011235813 cited in the first excerpt, above.  As a math nerd, I greatly appreciated it.

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Pushing Daisy - Scott Baron

   2018; 360 pages.  Book 2 (out of 5) in the series “The Clockwork Chimera”.  New Author? : No.  Genre : Space Opera; Alien Invasion Sci-Fi.  Overall Rating : 8*/10.

 

    Daisy is the chosen one.  It’s her destiny to save Earth.  That’s what everyone says.

 

    To be fair, though, “everyone” in this case means the dozen or so beings hiding out at the Dark Side Base on the far side of the Moon.  And it doesn’t include the most important one of those: Daisy herself.

 

    She’s already been to Earth once., and almost died there.  The planet’s a forsaken place that’s home to almost no humans anymore.  Instead, there are lots of cyborgs, mutants, and deadly insectoid Chithiids.  That last group came from who-knows-where and is especially committed to, and skilled at, killing humans.

 

    Daisy is fully human, but she wasn’t born on Earth and feels no kinship with it.  She denies that she’s anybody's “chosen one”, has no intention of ever returning to Earth, and lets everybody else at the Dark Side base know that.

 

    Whattaya think the odds are that she’ll end up back there anyway?

 

What’s To Like...

    Pushing Daisy is the second book in Scott Baron’s 5-volume Space Opera “The Clockwork Chimera”.  I’m reading them in order; the first book, Daisy’s Run, is reviewed here.

 

    It’s not a spoiler to reveal that Daisy does indeed make a return trip to our ruined planet, although that doesn’t happen until about halfway through the story.  This time, however, her Terran settings are not limited to Los Angeles; she travels to several more US cities, including my current stomping grounds, Phoenix, which she finds completely overrun with mutants.

 

   Several new beings are introduced, including Craaxit, a Chithiid soldier.  I have a feeling he’ll be developed into a recurring character in the series.  There are a couple of new AIs to meet and be wary of: Alma, who heads the Los Angeles underground, and Freya, a juvenile AI.  We’re also introduced to a new race of baddies called the Ra’az Hok.  If you cross paths with any of them, run away.  Fast.

 

    There are a half dozen or so of plot threads to keep the reader’s interest.  Some are ongoing, such as the Daisy/Vince affair.  Others are new, such as the secret door on the moon that Daisy happens across, and of course her various adventures down on Earth.

 

    The ending is a mixed affair.  It’s not a cliffhanger, but it’s not exactly a climax to the story either.  It’s sort of a stopping off point on the way to what presumably transpires in Book 3, Daisy’s Gambit.  If I were reading Pushing Daisy as a discrete book, I’d be miffed about how it ends, but fortunately, I’m utilizing Scott Baron’s 5-book bundle of the series, which means the story continues on the very next page of my Kindle.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon:  4.5/5 based on 637 ratings and 47 reviews.

    Goodreads: 4.25/5 based on 483 ratings and 51 reviews.

 

Kewlest New Word ...

Miyagi-ed (v.) : (a cleverly made-up word, referencing The Karate Kid).

 

Excerpts...

    “Okay,” she began, “here’s what we’re going to do.  It’s kind of like a game, and if you are really good, I’ll put a movie on and we’ll watch it together.”

    “Wouldn’t it be faster if you uploaded it to me?”

    “Well, you see, that’s the point here.  To help you learn to slow down and appreciate things.  If you watch it with me, you see it at the same speed I do.  Learn to savor the meal instead of inhaling it.”

    “But I don’t eat, Daisy.”

    “It’s a metaphor.”  She sighed.  (loc. 6725)

 

    “And look at these wonderful people you’ve brought with!  Oh, but those outfits.  No, no, that simply will not do.  Oh, this is exciting!  I can’t wait to get your measurements.  I have some wonderful ideas I’ve been meaning to try out.”

    “Habby, we don’t want any trouble,” Daisy said.  “We’re just passing through.”

    “Trouble?  Oh my, but you caused quite a lot of that when you went tearing off through the city last time.  You know, we lost several of our friends because of your foolishness.”

    “You were holding me captive.”

    “Potato, tomato, it’s all a matter of perspective, my dear.”  (loc. 8894)

 

Kindle Details…

    Pushing Daisy sells for $2.99 at Amazon.  The other four books in the series are all in the $0.99-$3.99 range.  The complete set can also be bought in the aforementioned bundle, which presently costs $7.99, and which occasionally is graciously discounted by the author.  Scott Baron has lots of other Sci-Fi series to offer; most of the individual books in those are in the $0.99-$4.99 range.

 

“You should always think outside the box.  "But I am a box.”  (loc. 6882)

    There are a couple of quibbles.  I counted 31 instances of cussing in the first 20% of Pushing Daisy (actually the first 8 of its 40 chapters, since pages aren’t numbered in e-book bundles), although that’s about half the rate that I found in Daisy’s Run.  That's about it for R-rated stuff, though.

 

    Not all of the plotlines get tied up.  I don’t mind Daisy’s relationship with Vince still dangling; I expect that to play out over the full course of the series.  But the Freya plot thread, which was well-developed and fascinating at its inception here, just fizzles out.  Also, at the book’s end, a major character's state of health still hangs in the balance.

 

    For me, the book started out slowly, with Daisy going to too many sparring sessions with Tamara, and too many meditation sessions with Fatima.  I recognize both are necessary to make Daisy a formidable protagonist, but for me, it made for slow spots in the tale-spinning.

 

    But no matter.  Once Daisy has her meds (that’s “meditations”, not “medications”) and can summon the fighting mentality of a seasoned warrior, she’s ready to make a trip to Earth and everything thereafter was a fast-paced, page-turning action-adventure.  The overarching plotline also expands nicely.  Before, Daisy’s aim was to save the few surviving humans in Los Angeles, now her horizons have grown considerably.

 

    8 Stars.  FWIW, I’m 40% of the way through this series, which is called The Clockwork Chimera, and I still have no clue as to why it’s called that.  Ah, but that's just one more reason to continue reading Daisy’s tale.

Friday, January 13, 2023

Daisy's Run - Scott Baron

   2018; 366 pages.  Full Title: Book 1 (out of 5) in the series “The Clockwork Chimera”.  New Author? : No.  Genre : Space Opera; Science-Fiction.  Overall Rating : 8*/10.

 

    It's always a bummer to wake up early, even if it's only a few minutes ahead of schedule.

 

    So you can’t blame Daisy Swarthmore and the rest of the crew on the spaceship Váli for being a bit testy when it happens to them.

 

    Especially when they’re roused six months early.  Especially when it’s the ship’s AI, nicknamed “Mal”, who’s waking them up.  Especially when it means being disturbed from a cryogenic sleep during their interstellar return home to planet Earth.  There had better be a very good reason for this.

 

    There is.  Something crashed into the Váli and the ship’s now on fire.

 

What’s To Like...

    Daisy’s Run is the first book in Scott Baron’s 5-volume Space Opera “The Clockwork Chimera”.  The storyline takes place across three settings: Outer Space (mostly on board the Váli), Earth, and the Moon.

 

    The overarching storyline involves Daisy learning about her past history, her present crewmates, and her inner abilities.  Nothing is as it seems, and although there is a steady trickle of hints as to the answers, most of them just lead to more questions.  I had fun tagging along with Daisy, trying to figure out what was going on, and enjoyed musing on the philosophical conundrums of “how do you know for sure you’re a human?” and “is eating rabbit venison bad for your karma?”

 

    I liked the nods to other sci-fi classics: 2001: A Space Odyssey (“Mal” is eerily similar to “Hal”), Alien, Planet of the Apes, Star Wars, and PKD’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?  I chuckled at the name-choice of the Los Angeles-based "Schwarzenegger Space Port", and had to look up what the Qi Gong meditation routine was.  The Neuro-Stims were a nice detail, as was the fascinating sport of Chess-Boxing.  I’m pretty sure that last one really exists; I vaguely recall reading about it many years ago.

 

    There aren’t a lot of characters to keep track of, but Scott Baron does a good job of making them an interesting and varied cast.  Daisy encounters a bunch of different critters, including humans, AIs, cyborgs, robots, and aliens, and sometimes it’s hard to discern exactly which species they are.  The writing style is storyline-driven, with a bunch of Daisy’s snarky banter with those around her mixed in.

 

    The ending is not particularly exciting, but does provide answers to most of the plot threads.  Daisy finds out who she is, what the Váli’s mission really entails, what the cosmic situation is, and what the rest of the crew have planned for her next.  The Epilogue is a catchy teaser for Book 2 in the series, Pushing Daisy, presumably chronicling how she reacts to all those revelations.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon:  4.3/5 based on 731 ratings and 139 reviews.

    Goodreads: 3.99/5 based on 830 ratings and 143 reviews.

 

Kewlest New Word ...

Horking (v.) : vomiting; coughing up.

 

Excerpts...

    “Okay, listen to this one.  They wrote, ‘Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong.  No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has already got there first, and is waiting for it.’

    Sarah was silent a moment.  “That’s kind of messed up, Daisy.”

    “Yeah, but that doesn’t mean it’s not true.”

    She stopped crawling.

    “Hey!”

   “Hang on a minute,” Daisy said, the pulled a fresh pen from her pocket and scratched out a message of her own, then started crawling again.  “’Without a little darkness from time to time, man would forget that he dwells in the light,’” Sarah read.  "Who said that one, Daze?"

    Daisy continued her crawl for the exit.

    "I did."  (loc. 715)

 

    “What’s the next step in our evolution?  In theirs?  Are they trying to bastardize mankind until we are as much machinery as they are?  And why do humans have exposed metal, while full-on robots are covered with flesh?”

    “They’re probably just trying to make us feel comfortable around them, is all.  Familiar faces and all that.”

    “But why cyborgs?  I mean, take Barry for instance.  He’s basically a sentient toaster covered in steak—”

    “I think he might take issue with that description.”  (loc. 2083)

 

Kindle Details…

    Daisy’s Run goes for $0.99 at Amazon right now.  The other four books in the series are all in the $2.99-$3.99 range; or you can buy the entire series in a bundle for $7.99. Scott Baron has several other Sci-Fi series for your Kindle, and they seem to follow the same pricing strategy: $0.99 for the first book in the series, $2.99-$3.99 for the others, and bundles appropriately discounted.

 

“Yet here you are, a chatty ghost in my head.”  (loc. 2891)

    I couldn’t find much to quibble about in Daisy’s Run.  The pacing seemed a bit slow at first, and the text felt overly-descriptive at first, but that was inevitable since Scott Baron has world-building to do, plus characters and enigmatic plot threads to introduce.  Once that’s done, the action speeds up nicely.

 

    There’s a fair amount of cussing (27 instances in the first 10% of the book) and a couple of rolls-in-the-hay, but nothing lewd and lurid.  Some reviewers were put off by the sex passages, but hey, that’s a common occurrence in Space Opera novels.

 

    Other reviewers felt Daisy was an unlikeable protagonist, one going so far as to accuse her of being a bigot.  Well, it’s true she gets called that at one point in the story, but the alleged bigotry is against robotic entities, and is ultimately proved false.  Methinks someone had a grudge against the author.

 

    My only big gripe has to do with the Amazon blurb for the Kindle edition, where one of the genres is listed as “Humorous Science Fiction”.  Amazon lies.  If you pick up this book for the LOL’s, you’re going to be sorely disappointed.  In fairness though, neither of the other two formats – Audiobook and Paperback, label this as a humorous sci-fi novel.

 

    8 Stars.  Overall, Daisy’s Run kept me interested and fully lived up to my expectations for a Space Opera.  Now that the main characters have been established and the requisite world-building is done, it’s time to get kicking some Chithiid ass in the sequel.