Cover Image: Contact

Contact

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Member Reviews

based on a classical plot (the genocidal alien on a holy crusade to clean the universe of the unworthy and filthy Others Beings) the story takes an interesting twist where everything is not what it seems. The author craft a way of travel FTL based on not completely impossible way and don't try to go too deep in the technical explanations useless for the story, science, yes but fiction overall! The psychology of the aliens could have been more ..alien, as it is the good ones are .. good, faithful, understandable, reliable and the bad one look like directly like a mix of a mystical crazy war of the middle west, the nazi from the WW2 and the stalinian russia. The last good guys, barely escaped by the skin of their teeth, keep running avoiding destruction each time at the last moment. There is some anchor point for possibly some new twists: the other aliens more friendly because of the enemy of my enemy is an ally, but look quite dumb as a brick about trans-species relation, are they more than the last ones of there species?  Will the human survivor of the colony ship got a place in the plot? Are the bad aliens so monolithic as it looks? In all, a good first book for a series, a universe nicely build and a storyline with a lot of room for some complexity and for a lot of sequels.
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Contact had me turning page after  page without a stop.  It's a great military space action book.  Dandridge has put forth a remarkable effort and I cannot wait for the next book in the sequel.  Bravo!
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Contact is an ambitious space opera. Unfortunately, the success of the attention to detail, world-building, and attempts at poignancy are off-set by the often-dragging technical descriptions, confusing shifts in perspective, and repetition of concepts.  

While I like the cover, I assumed the novel was going to be a fun romp, but the story carries a far more serious tone. While this is not a major problem, it took me a few chapters to adjust. 

I loved the concept of the aliens. The Xakalar are well-described and their history is detailed and realistic. I liked Xelarn and Matt’s dynamic as friends and co-workers, but we didn’t learn enough about the two of them. Both characters are young, ambitions and he care for their family and planet, but we don’t learn enough about their likes, dislikes, relationships, or childhoods to understand them fully. And while I did enjoy seeing the war from different perspectives, most characters had even less development than Matt and Xelarn. There were even some characters who are given an introduction (the archeologist, Matt’s sister) but don’t contribute to the plot.  

The representation of women and people of colour in this story was excellent for the most part - there are women in STEM, women in high-ranking military positions, Matt is a person of colour, and so is most of the crew. Unlike some books that include token representation to make it seem “futuristic”, the author genuinely strove to create an equal society. 
There is a section with a riot that bordered on poignant, considering our social climate today, but there was not enough of that to make a real point. There is no love story in this book (not a bad thing). 

Unfortunately, as I mentioned above, there is far far too much technical description of FTL travel, ship technology, warp drives, “nullium”, and a whole bunch of other stuff that might please tech-heads but which distracted me from the story. And there was an egregious amount of telling how a character feels. A man will be said to have a sweaty face and then it will follow with “because he was anxious.” In both scenarios, which happen often, it’s overkill. 

Yet, despite these things, I did enjoy it. I liked the concepts, I liked the space battles, I liked the overall quest (once I realized what it was). Unfortunately, I can’t give it more than 3 stars. I would prefer to give it a solid 2.5.
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