Admiral Fury part 1 Purple Blood Carinae Sector eBook David Buck
Download As PDF : Admiral Fury part 1 Purple Blood Carinae Sector eBook David Buck
It is one hundred and fifty years after the Traders and the Maveen landed on Earth, and aware of the nature of the vassal races, humanity is cautiously reaching for the stars. The Cephrit Tilmud war has raged for one hundred and fifty years, and the war along with other events, has distracted the vassal races from interacting with Earth. The war is ending, and the vassal races are now able to return to star systems near the solar system. Admiral Mary Neilson has brought her fleet to the former Dradfer colonies after the Cephrit gave a warning of a possible attack, and her fleet is confronted by a vast armada of Jerecab ships. Elsewhere in the galaxy, the Barede colonists are settling other colonies on the long journey from the edge of the Milky Way back to Earth.
Authors note Revised 18th March 2013.
Approx 89,800 words
Recommended Price $3.99
Admiral Fury part 1 Purple Blood Carinae Sector eBook David Buck
This is the first part of book two consisting of three in the series of the Carinae Sector. I would recommend the author's first three part on of the Carinae prior to reading of these novels in this series. It is not necessary, as sufficent background is part of the opening of the book in relationship to plot, but for full immerison into the story I think you should. The book has multi plot lines, from human to alien. Each of the alien cultures have their own history with all the other races. Some customs of respect are shown to decrease tensions in certain interactions, such as bowing, which a earlier reviewer found fault with, as each race manner of speech is also interrepted by the author(as a descripted character presentation).Now to the story. No spoilers. I do not believe it is correct ever to detail plot or highlight certain transistional moment in a story in a review here.
The story in the first page identifies it is 150 years from the concludison of the last book part three. It is logical start point and lays the ground work for the series. The plot line as described above is spot on. The characters and their and alien from individual to species motivations are approproiate. Point of views from the multi races are clearly defined and understandable. The actions scenes are well presented, understandable in tactics, and with unexpected results.
I really enjoyed this book. I was only half way though the first book, when I bought the second book in this series.
I fully recommend you buy this book. If there were no E readers and only paperbacks, I would of gladly bought it. For me that is the highest praise I can give.
With respect
Jadawin
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Admiral Fury part 1 Purple Blood Carinae Sector eBook David Buck Reviews
This author has excellent potential. I have read some of his other books, and all so far have suffered [in my view] from similar problems. They badly need a competent editor to remove extraneous material and sort out word use at variance with the subject under discussion.
One thing that really grated, was the overuse and misuse of some words, one notable example being "evaluate." I got to dread finding it. As an example, I would recommend he use "Mary considered whether or not she should change her plans" not "Mary evaluated whether or not to change her plans." There were many worse examples, but that is one I remember. It reminded me of NCO's I met in the army - they latched onto a word and used it wherever and whenever they could, applicable or not.
Moving along.
The actual story theme is good, which is why I gave it 3 stars. A shame it was a bit jerky moving from one principal subject to another and as mentioned, the belabouring of some words.
Quite readable, but could have been better.
My pen fingers were twitching. I really wanted to edit this book.......
I've officially given up. As I've stated in previous reviews of Mr. Buck's work, the storytelling is awesome. The writing? (Mostly grammar errors, wrong words, awkward sentence structure, etc.) Not so much.
Apparently, Mr. Buck writes using dictation software. Not a problem, IF you take the trouble to go back through the manuscript and correct the inaccuracies and mistakes. Mr. Buck does NOT do this. The sheer number of errors still present in all 4 of the books that I've read is embarrassing, and, as I've stated previously, completely preventable.
I will not be purchasing any more of Mr. Buck's books. Being a good storyteller isn't enough. At the least, you have to care enough about your readers to perform the most rudimentary of editing.
I had hopes that I'd see the evolution and maturation of Mr. Buck as a new writer. 50% through the fourth book I see little evidence that he intends to adjust his writing process at all.
I may keep an eye on reviews for Mr. Buck, but it is unlikely that I'll make the effort required to give him another chance. The irritation that I've experienced simply isn't worth the return
I found the universe, the setting, the author weaved his story in to be on a vast canvas that allowed for multiple points of view from characters from different races and factions. This is a real strength of this book as the effects of what happens to one group is seen by others in a different light. It is like a global experience today, where something happening in one country might not affect the day to day in another, but it has impact to certain characters who have an interest there.
I also loved the fact that these characters have families. That its also a generational backdrop, where the different life spans could mean one long lived character gets to interact with multiple generations of a family line they have known or what were historical events to some were events that the long lived had experienced first hand or lived through from a distance. Families aren't just used as something broken in a heroes past or directly threatened to motivate in the present or future. In some cases they just are there to add to the dimensions of the characters which is something a lot of authors don't include. Families in a lot of stories are there just to have been lost or be threatened. Here they are part of life, although given the growing threats, they too are threatened by not so much directly.
There are plans and plots that will take a while to see develop, others that are resolved by the end of the book, with the author's talent of tension escalating at a pace that isn't too fast, and he knows when to level out and resolve some issues, while letting others continue.
And then there are learning the cultures as the story unfolds. Its never done as a dry data dump, but mentioned along the way so one picks up tidbits here and there that makes the aliens different rather than some ability or outward appearance. This is also shown in the various romances or married lives of the characters. Its delightful to see what indicates interest between two alien adults, what their culture considers romantic and how it factors into the overall plots, if only the concern that naturally comes with a loved one in danger.
Its a great picture the author paints in very broad strokes at times, subtle strokes at others. I know at the completion of book one, I immediately dove into book two to continue to read this grand story on an epic backdrop.
This is the first part of book two consisting of three in the series of the Carinae Sector. I would recommend the author's first three part on of the Carinae prior to reading of these novels in this series. It is not necessary, as sufficent background is part of the opening of the book in relationship to plot, but for full immerison into the story I think you should. The book has multi plot lines, from human to alien. Each of the alien cultures have their own history with all the other races. Some customs of respect are shown to decrease tensions in certain interactions, such as bowing, which a earlier reviewer found fault with, as each race manner of speech is also interrepted by the author(as a descripted character presentation).
Now to the story. No spoilers. I do not believe it is correct ever to detail plot or highlight certain transistional moment in a story in a review here.
The story in the first page identifies it is 150 years from the concludison of the last book part three. It is logical start point and lays the ground work for the series. The plot line as described above is spot on. The characters and their and alien from individual to species motivations are approproiate. Point of views from the multi races are clearly defined and understandable. The actions scenes are well presented, understandable in tactics, and with unexpected results.
I really enjoyed this book. I was only half way though the first book, when I bought the second book in this series.
I fully recommend you buy this book. If there were no E readers and only paperbacks, I would of gladly bought it. For me that is the highest praise I can give.
With respect
Jadawin
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