Ratings25
Average rating3.9
'A brilliantly plotted yarn of survival and far-future political intrigue' Guardian ***SHORTLISTED FOR THE PHILIP K. DICK AWARD*** The last thing Sanda remembers is her gunship exploding. She expected to be recovered by salvage-medics and to awaken in friendly hands, patched-up and ready to rejoin the fight. Instead she wakes up 230 years later, on a deserted enemy starship called The Light of Berossus - or, as he prefers to call himself, 'Bero'. Bero tells Sanda the war is lost. That the entire star system is dead. But is that the full story? After all, in the vastness of space, anything is possible . . . Dazzling space battles, deadly galactic politics and rogue AI collide in Velocity Weapon, an epic space opera from award-winning author Megan E. O'Keefe. Praise for Velocity Weapon 'An entertaining SF thriller' SciFiNow 'Furious action sequences, funny dialogue, and a plot that will keep you guessing every step of the way' K. B. Wagers 'Velocity Weapon is fast-paced, twisty, edge-of-your-seat fun. Space opera fans are in for a massive treat!' Marina J. Lostetter
Series
3 primary booksThe Protectorate is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Megan E. O'Keefe.
Reviews with the most likes.
The start of an epic space opera, this book has left me hungry for more. A sweeping tale of rogue spaceships, altered humans, alien technology and politics. The universe built for Velocity Weapon is an intriguing one, the Primes (descendant from Prime Inventive, a corporation that first discovered faster than light travel) are a haughtily superior bunch who have come into conflict with another group of settlers (The Icarions) in one of the more backwater planetary systems. These Icarions have developed weapons to try and counter the technological advantage that the primes have. Add into this mix the mysteries behind how Prime Inventive came to discover their key technologies and you have the set up for an epic space opera that I am excited to follow further.
Ada Prime is a distant outpost of the Prime empire, and this book focuses on a brother and sister from this system, Sanda and Biran, along with a few other minor characters. Sanda is a Gunnery Sergeant and Biran is a Keeper, one of a mysterious group who guard Prime's secrets. When Sanda goes missing after a disastrous battle with Icarion this kicks Biran into action politicking his way to try and recover the missing and the dead from the battle. Sanda meanwhile is rescued by a strange ship with a powerful AI.
This book is epic in scope, with engaging characters and a vast and intriguing universe set up, of which we have only just brushed the surface in this book. There are a few pacing issues (the book is quite slow in places) but the set up is worth it and the ending definitely leaves you hungry for more!
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
—
WHAT'S VELOCITY WEAPON ABOUT?
There are two primary storylines—either one of them would have been a decent basis for a novel on their own. Combine them and you've got something special.
Sergeant Sanda Greeve is flying a fairly routine patrol when she's attacked—a rare burst of heat in a long Cold War. She wakes up in a ship from the fleet that attacked her. Alone. Except for the AI that runs the ship (is the ship?). Bero, the AI, shows Sanda footage and evidence that the Icarions that build him wiped out all life in the system except Sanda 230 years ago.
The second primary storyline features her brother, Biran. Biran's speaking at his graduation ceremony when his sister (and others) are attacked. The news disrupts the ceremony, and Biran uses finds himself in the position of having to calm those who are watching (live or on the news). In the days and weeks following, he rises to a prominent position—becoming the government's spokesman, reassuring and leading the populace through this time.
We bounce back and forth as Biran tries to stave off a war, and to Sanda dealing with its results. It's a great concept and you just don't know what to expect even though Bero has told Sanda what's happening.
And then another escape pod shows up and all bets are off.
THE STUFF I SHOULD'VE PAID MORE ATTENTION TO
There were some flashbacks to the invention of the Gate technology that makes interstellar travel possible, which was pretty interesting, but there was something about it that I just couldn't focus on for very long.
Similarly, there was a tertiary story to the main two. This one focused on a street gang involved in some pretty petty crimes, but they stumbled onto something pretty big. This was interesting, but I couldn't keep most of the characters straight and had a hard time following it. This was solely due to my focus, and as many times as I told myself to pay attention, I didn't. I predict that this is going to come back pretty significantly in the sequel—I'm just hoping I can play catch up. If you read and/or listen to this book—learn from my mistake and pay attention.
HOW WAS THE NARRATION?
I liked it. Bero in particular is hard to get right—and vital to get right. Jameson does it. Everything else came out good, too, don't get me wrong, but for this, the AI is essential. He captured the tones, flavors, and diverse set of characters in an engaging and convincing way.
SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT VELOCITY WEAPON?
When this came out, it looked intriguing. When I started seeing it show up on my Goodreads feed and book blogs I follow, I really became interested. But I didn't follow up on it. I spent pretty much e the entire time listening to Velocity Weapon berating myself for that.
This is the kind of thing I like in SF. A clever story, compelling characters, and great tech in space. I liked the humans, I really enjoyed the AI (I sort of figured this would be a variation on the AI in Rockwell's Serengeti books, and wow, I was wrong). It was a SF adventure, but it was also a straightforward thriller (with SF frills). I had a blast with this and am looking forward to the sequel.
Is this the new ‘Expanse'? Possibly! See my full video review here - https://youtu.be/lbvzitfFtMQ