Particularize Based On Books Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1)
Title | : | Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1) |
Author | : | Nathan Lowell |
Book Format | : | Audiobook |
Book Edition | : | Podiobook |
Pages | : | Pages: 250 pages |
Published | : | 2007 by Nathan Lowell |
Categories | : | Science Fiction. Space. Space Opera. Fiction |
Nathan Lowell
Audiobook | Pages: 250 pages Rating: 4.15 | 6625 Users | 578 Reviews
Narration As Books Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1)
THE GOLDEN AGE OF SAIL HAS RETURNED -- IN THE YEAR 2351 When his mother dies in a flitter crash, eighteen-year-old Ishmael Horatio Wang must find a job with the planet company or leave the system--and NerisCo isn't hiring. With credits running low, and prospects limited, he has just one hope...to enlist for two years with a deep space commercial freighter. Ishmael, who only rarely visited the Neris Orbital, and has never been off-planet alone before, finds himself part of an eclectic crew sailing a deep space leviathan between the stars. Join the crew of the SC Lois McKendrick, a Manchester built clipper as she sets solar sails in search of profit for her company and a crew each entitled to a share equal to their rating.Details Books Toward Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1)
Original Title: | Quarter Share |
Edition Language: | English URL http://www.podiobooks.com/title/quarter-share |
Series: | Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1, Solar Clipper universe #1 |
Characters: | Ishmael Horatio Wang, Philip "Pip" Carstairs, Brilliantine Smith, Bev |
Literary Awards: | Parsec Award for Best Speculative Fiction (2011) |
Rating Based On Books Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1)
Ratings: 4.15 From 6625 Users | 578 ReviewsAssessment Based On Books Quarter Share (Golden Age of the Solar Clipper #1)
I really enjoyed this read. No aliens, no military, no angst. Just normal people serving on a merchant freighter plying their interstellar wares. No real evil corporations taking advantage of all. It's kind of strange reading a book without any of the standard tropes of science fiction and space opera. But I really enjoyed it. The author has an engaging style and manages to educate you without hitting you over the head. The characters are fun and the technology seems practical.I don't want to frighten potential readers away by saying something off the wall, but I don't know how to better compliment Nathan but to say that I know of no other author who can devote a whole chapter to making coffee and make it utterly engrossing. It's a story I absolutely could not walk away from, and I don't just mean the coffee. I've even listened to the podcast 2 or 3 times. In a world with so much media available, it takes something special to elicit a second read/listen to say nothing
4+ stars. Heinlein would be proud. This is a great story of a young man joining the crew of a merchant ship and travelling between the stars.There is no sex or violence, just a crew of interesting people making their way through life. There is a wise Captain and a curmudgeon XO, but they rise above the stereotypes.I'm looking forward to the rest of the series, which looks to follow the young man's advancement as a trade-merchant..
The way I felt listening to this podiobook was expectant, continuing on to a new episode waiting for something, anything, to happen. "Quarter Share" is primarily the story of a galley boy making coffee, studying for a couple rather unimportant tests and trading a few minor goods. He succeeds wildly at all these endeavors, encountering almost no difficulty in anything he sets his mind to (including dealing with the death of his mother with almost no trouble at all).Which leads to my second
I read this and it immidiately reminded me of how life felt when I was stationed aboard ship with the U.S. Navy. What life is like underway, out of port or any sight of land with the hour to hour day by day grind of just doing your job, is something that has to be experiened to be understood. I wish something had blown up or been shot at, but, this is the Merchant fleet right? A good light read, enjoyable, uncomplicated but not challenging. I'd classify it as a good space opera.
I really love the concept of having a book about ordinary people doing ordinary things, and I was enjoying for the first half of the book but eventually things got excessively repetitive. The characters in the book are almost cartoon-ish in depth, and even the 'bad boy' character of the book is easy-going. If I was reading a book about 14 year olds instead of 18 year olds I may have found it more believable. Ultimately, though, the book ends up going through the logic and math behind a fictional
This is not shoot-em-up science fiction. No exploding spaceships, no phasers or light-swords, no monsters. The most violent event, apart from the death of the narrator's mother before the book begins, is a mugging, and all characters appear to be direct descendants of Terrans, living spread across the galaxy in a state of profound peace.This is also not thinky science fiction. No philosophical discursions, no demand that the reader confront distasteful, alarming, or painful ideas. Ishmael (yes,
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