Ratings6
Average rating3.8
Time Siege, a fast-paced time-travel adventure from award-winning author Wesley Chu Having been haunted by the past and enslaved by the present, James Griffin-Mars is taking control of the future. Earth is a toxic, sparsely inhabited wasteland--the perfect hiding place for a fugitive ex-chronman to hide from the authorities. James has allies, scientists he rescued from previous centuries: Elise Kim, who believes she can renew Earth, given time; Grace Priestly, the venerated inventor of time travel herself; Levin, James's mentor and former pursuer, now disgraced; and the Elfreth, a population of downtrodden humans who want desperately to believe that James and his friends will heal their ailing home world. James also has enemies. They include the full military might of a benighted solar system ruled by corporate greed and a desperate fear of what James will do next. At the forefront of their efforts to stop him is Kuo, the ruthless security head, who wants James's head on a pike and will stop at nothing to obtain it. Don't forget to check out James's previous time travel adventure in Time Salvager. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Featured Series
2 primary booksTime Salvager is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by Wesley Chu.
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This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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This is, in a sense, one of the most pointless posts I've done. If you've read Time Salvager, then I can't imagine you needing to be convinced to read Time Siege, maybe you need convincing to move it up on your TBR, or just a reminder that this is out there. If you haven't read Time Salvager, you shouldn't read Time Siegeyet because it won't make all that much sense. But I'll try to say a little about the book.
This book really could just be the next chapters of Salvager. It's just taking the story to the next step – yes, there are distinct plot and character arcs, but on the whole, it's just what should come next. Making it hard for me to know what to say. Some things that I thought were pretty well resolved in Siege are dealt with again, and hopefully resolved (or closer to it) now. Some characters come back in ways that I couldn't have expected, some in ways that were exactly what I expected.
One thing that's crystal clear now – and has been evident all along, really – is that Wesley Chu can write a fight scene. Whether it's single combat or larger forces, he delivers. The scenes are suspenseful, intense, and believable. He captures what I imagine both the chaos and order of a battle would be like for those involved and those behind the lines.
Somewhere along the line, I got the impression that this was a duology, not a trilogy. So I spent most of the book thinking that this could be a dark, yet satisfying ending. Definitely not an “Everybody Lives happily every after” ending, but one that wraps things up well. Then the satisfying part became untenable (possible, but not likely) . . . and thankfully, it quickly became clear that it was going to be a trilogy. That said, everything is hanging in the balance here at the end of Time Siege, and it's going to take a lot of heroics for there to be even a chance for an ending that doesn't involve the doom of humanity. Even with a lot of heroics, that's a distinct possibility – part of me wants that to happen, just to see how Chu pulls it off.
I remember liking Salvager more than I did, but whatever – the sequel did everything it needed to do to push the story forward into the third book, with heightened action, more investment in the characters and what happens to them. Chu accomplished everything he needed to here and more. I could really use a time machine now to get my hands on the concluding volume.
Another solid Chu performance but he did the thing you do not do...he ended it with a cliffhanger and hasn't written the last book. Instead he decided to move on to other projects with no eta of return. What kind of horse shit is that? If I read this in 2016 I would be livid but hopefully since it's been 6 years we will be getting an eta within a couple years.