Cara Bishop already saved the world. Now, with the war over and the aliens defeated, she’s teaching other pilots to fly the alien ships that turned the tide. Until the government approaches her about joining a super secret mission, that is.Steve Hunter is the product of alien DNA. He was created in a lab, designed to destroy the aliens in a ground war that was never fought. Now, they’re finally … they’re finally putting him to use as the leader of this new mission.
Together with the scientist who created Steve and the genius who invented the ship, Cara and her captain set off on a final adventure. The U.S.S. Endeavor goes in search of allies among the stars. What they find is more than they ever bargained for. If their mission is to be a success, they will have to solve a mystery and escape destruction at the hands of an all new foe. All in a day’s work for the Endeavor crew.
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A young woman who saved Earth from an alien invasion is pulled into a secret government project which will launch the members of the team into Earth’s first space exploration. They run into two different alien races who have been battling each other for eons.
Imagine Tony Stark, a genetically altered captain and some other unique characters, I look forward to the next book.
PATRICIA LEE MACOMBER is a author I was interested in checking out the works of since I had her writing recommended to me by a friend. I decided to check out STAR QUEST: THE JOURNEY BEGINS in large part because of the cover due to the fact I’m a big fan of STAR TREK and the author clearly communicated they were going to go for that sort of feel. I wasn’t disappointed and found this to be a delightful afternoon read.
The premise is Cara Bishop is a fighter pilot who survived an Ender’s Game/Independence Day-like invasion of the Earth where a large portion of the planet was devastated. Cara successfully destroyed the enemy mothership with a risky maneuver and became a planetary hero. This, despite the fact she actually had been sent on a suicide mission and wasn’t supposed to come back.
Cara gets selected to serve as first mate on the reverse-engineered flagship of Earth’s first starship, serving under Steve Hunter the world’s first and only Spartan supersoldier. Cara and Steve have immediate and electric chemistry, which is problematic since they’re boss and subordinate. Oh and about to depart on a three year mission to seek out and pester new lifeforms. We also have an eclectic supporting cast, including a Tony Stark-esque billionaire and Cara’s Admiral father.
The book is divided into two sections with the first being Cara struggling with her decision whether or not to go into space (of course she is) as well as whether she can resist falling in love with her yummy captain (probably not). The second part of the story involves First Contact with a race of peaceful clones who need the crew’s help in avoiding an interstellar incident. Honestly, I liked the first half a bit more than the second but I didn’t dislike either.
If I had to describe the book’s tone, I’d probably say this is closer to THE ORVILLE versus pure Star Trek. However, there’s homages galore to lots of science fiction franchises I enjoy. The characters are a bit on the silly side and have even less military discipline than the U.S.S Enterprise but no one ever cared about that anywhere but Babylon Five. It also reminds me a bit of HALO and MASS EFFECT, which is not a bad thing.
This is a fun and lighthearted book which should be read fully with the intention of amusing rather than thrilling. Our heroes are more like Stephanie Plum in space rather than hardened explorers and that’s not a bad thing. It was a great palette cleanser after a bunch of darker and edgier fiction I’d been reading. Those looking for the next epic drama should probably look elsewhere but that’s not what this book is trying to be.
Enjoyed it some much, that I couldn’t wait to read the next one in the series. And was sad to see it wasn’t out yet 🙁
The main character is portrayed as tough military pilot but the dialog is anything but, more suited to a teenager.
Good read: engaging characters, interesting story line.