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August 8, 2013

Review and Giveaway: The Darwin Elevator

The Darwin Elevator First in the Dire Earth trilogy
By Jason M. Hough
Available now from Del Rey (Penguin Random House)
Review copy
Read a free prequel, "Wave of Infection"

Del Rey is so excited about this debut sci-fi trilogy that they're publishing all three books back to back, July-August-September.  That makes me happy, because I am not one for waiting.  Also, the end of THE DARWIN ELEVATOR left me wanting more.  Jason M. Hough already knows how to end a novel with a bit of intrigue.

I was attracted by the premise of THE DARWIN ELEVATOR, which is basically space SF meets zombies.  A mysterious alien race, called Builders, sent an elevator to Earth that extends from Darwin, Australia into space.  It exudes an Aura and is the only place where humans are safe from a strange plague that was also sent by the aliens.  Then there's Skyler Lukien and his crew of scavengers, all immunes.  Their ability to explore might be the only way to save the humans if the aliens return.  Well, their abilities and scientist Tania Sharma's brain.

There's liberal use of villain POV, which made me grit my teeth.  So many greedy, self-satisfied, leering thoughts.  And he's not a particularly interesting villain.  There are people who look like they may be the villain of the piece, but who turn out more ambiguous.  But no, the main villain is a standard no-plan-beyond-power-for-himself, wants-to-rape-the-heroine villain.  It was a real bum note in an exciting, fun novel and THE DARWIN ELEVATOR just kept going back to him.

When it comes to power struggles, actually, the book itself tended to struggle.  So much of the book could be solved if people talked to each other instead of keeping secrets for no particular.  I preferred when people were actually doing things.  Tania and her assistant sciencing, Skylar trying desperately to be a leader, scavenging and fighting off hordes of subhumans.  My two favorite characters, Kelly and Sam, did not get near enough screen-time.  Now there's two women who get things done.

THE DARWIN ELEVATOR is a fun dystopian zombie novel with nifty ideas and a number of interesting characters.  It's got aliens, saboteurs, and approximately one big secret per character.  I think I would've absolutely loved this one if the villain didn't grate on my nerves so much.  But after all, I'm not supposed to like him.
Thanks to Del Rey and TLC Book Tours, I have one copy to give away.  US/Canada only.
a Rafflecopter giveaway

12 comments:

  1. "But no, the main villain is a standard no-plan-beyond-power-for-himself, wants-to-rape-the-heroine villain."

    Um. Yikes. He sounds absolutely miserable and I can see why spending any time reading his POV would make you grit your teeth! I'm glad the other aspects of the story made up for a poor villain though, I'm kind of intrigued by a space zombie story!

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    1. Yeah, and it seems from other reviews he didn't grate on many people. But oh I am so tired of that character type. (I can get that a dude is awful without having to read his thoughts about not caring all that much about consent.)

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  2. Sounds interesting! More well-rounded villains are always more interesting...but overall, glad it was a fun read!

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    1. It definitely didn't seem as long as it was.

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  3. I'm slightly more familiar with soft scifi but I'd like to read more hard scifi. I'm ambivalent about space opera -- sometimes I think it's too melodramatic but sometimes I like getting swept up in the epic.

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    1. Oh, this one is pretty soft. No explanation of how the science works at all.

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  4. My students have been trying to push sci-fi titles on me for a long time now, and the only reason I've resisted so far is that I haven't quite found a synopsis I've been absolutely intrigued by yet. I do teach Ender's Game, though, and I love that its hero is so brave and pensive despite being only 6 years old in the beginning. Perhaps I can dip my foot in the sci-fi water again with The Darwin Elevator ...

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    1. Ender's Game is a great sci-fi book. Hope you find the SF book that works for you!

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  5. Yeah, I don't think I'd necessarily enjoy being inside the villain's head, but otherwise this sounds like a fun read!

    Thanks for being on the tour.

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  6. Ugh about the villain wanting to rape the heroine-hate them!

    Love the publisher's idea to publish all three books back to back-I hate waiting too especially on sci-fi and fantasy novels because sometimes I forget details about their world :)

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    1. I know! It can be so hard to keep which series is which, with the large casts and details and everything, so it's nice to get it all together.

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