Tag: Rhett C. Bruno

The Complete Circuit Trilogy by Rhett C. Bruno

http://rhettbruno.com/the-complete-circuit-trilogy/The Complete Circuit Trilogy

by Rhett C. Bruno
Series: The Circuit Trilogy, #1-3

Kindle Edition, 750 pg.
Diversion Books, 2017


Well I messed up — I got started on this late, but work has been so busy that I haven’t had time to read as much the last couple of weeks. Add in a cold that’s rendered me incapable of reading anything for the last 3 days (which is driving me crazy). Long story short, I didn’t finish this.

My not-finishing isn’t anything against the book — like it usually is — it’s all me. I want to stress that. I messed up, I let my schedule get away from me, I agreed to take on a book I didn’t have time for (this isn’t the only book I had to stop at this time — there are two I didn’t finish reading so I could have a shot at reading this one, this is just the only one with a deadline).

Here’s the publisher’s blurb (or at least some of it):

Earth is a dying planet. To survive, humanity founds the Circuit, a string of colonies across the solar system, dedicated to mining resources vital to preserving what remains of mankind.

The New Earth Tribunal, a powerful religious faction, rises to rule the Circuit. They believe a Spirit within the Earth will one day appear and welcome humanity back home. But following a string of seemingly random attacks, the Tribunal suspects its mortal enemy, the Ceresians, have rallied to once again challenge their absolute rule.

Join an unlikely band of would-be saviors–the Tribunal’s best spy, a roguish Ceresian mercenary, a subservient android and a disgraced general–as they are drawn into a conspiracy destined to change the Circuit forever.

A new, sinister threat has arisen–and it plans to bring down the Tribunal once and for all.

The spy is interestingly written, the mercenary . . . I’m ambivalent about, the android rocks, and the general is likely to be a good character that’ll keep the reader guessing (even if he comes across as a know-it-all). This was originally put out in three volumes, but now is published in one collection.

The writing is crisp, it moves along well, and Bruno does a good job of getting the reader into the world he’s created without making it lose any of its alienness. If I had more time on my hands, I’d dig into this — but I just don’t. I feel terrible about that. I did delete the free version Bruno sent me and bought another copy — by the way, it’s on sale this week. I think it’s be worth your time to give it a shot.

If you want more about the books, check out Brad Horner’s reviews on The Circuit: Executor Rising, The Circuit: Progeny of Vale, and Earthfall: The Circuit.

Titanborn by Rhett C. Bruno (revised)

TitanbornTitanborn

by Rhett C. Bruno

Kindle Edition, 246 pg.
Hydra, 2016

Read: November 28 – 29, 2016

I’ve been to the rotting sewer tunnels submerged beneath the Martian domes. I’ve been to the most remote slums on Earth, and to the depths of asteroid mining colonies where being able to see the outline of your own hand in front of your face was considered bright. I’ve seen death all over and been on the end of the killing more times than I cared to count . . .

When he’s not reminiscing like an inverse-Roy Batty, Malcolm Graves is a bounty hunter of sorts — working for one of the handful of corporations that really run the solar system. He’s been at it longer than most, and has no intention of retiring anytime soon. His body, however, might have other things in mind — he’s slowing a bit, both in reflex and thought — add in a little bad luck, and Malcolm’s starting to worry about his future.

So when he’s near the site of a terrorist attack during Earth’s biggest celebration, he seizes the opportunity to get some justice and re-establish his position with the company. Sure, they’re saddling him with a partner rather than letting him work alone, but if that’s what it takes. . . . Only it’s not just a partner, it’s a young guy, fresh from an elite training program for exceptional cadets. Zhram is almost an android, it seems.

Their investigation brings them into contact with a seditious group, trying to overthrow the ruling forces on Saturn’s moon, Titan, so that the descendants of the original colonists (Titanborn). It soon becomes a race against time — can the duo find those responsible for the crime on earth and bring them in before the movement can grow and begin to make inroads against the ruling powers? Why they attempt to do so, their partnership grows and the two being to trust and learn from each other. Zhram is one of the more promising characters in the Lt. Commander Data/Odo/Sheldon Cooper-vein of people trying to learn to be more human that I’ve seen recently.

At its core, the central relationship is the classic mismatched police partners (see the Aykroyd/Hanks Dragnet, Lethal Weapon), but with a SF twist (see The Caves of Steel and Almost Human). The book is full of themes, tropes and scenarios straight from these (and similar) sources. Which isn’t to say that Titanborn is derivative — it’s part of the tradition, reflecting the best parts of its antecedents, shaping them to tell Bruno’s story.

The writing was strong (I thought a couple of times early on that he overwrote a line or two, but nothing too horrible) — the fight scenes good, the tech was believable, etc. An all-around well constructed novel.

I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again — it doesn’t matter if you tell a story that’s been told before, or using tropes commonly used — it’s how you use those tropes, how you tell the story — and Bruno did it in a very satisfactory way. I liked Malcolm from the get-go, I enjoyed watching the budding partnership between he and Zhaff, and even though I pegged (most of) the solution very early on, I really dug the reveal. I liked the characters, I appreciated the way that Bruno paced things and guided us through the shaky political landscape (and at least some of the reasons for the instability). I’d gladly read another half-dozen (at least) novels about these two racing around the solar system.

Disclaimer: This was provided to me by the author in exchange for my honest take on the book — note that I said “honest” and not “timely.” I was supposed to have this done months ago. My thanks for the book and apologies for the tardiness, Mr. Bruno.

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3 Stars

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