
Admiral
Admiral
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Narrator Johnathan McClain's tough-guy cadence fits this space adventure. The first-person protagonist wears the uniform of an admiral--but may not be one. When he awakens from a cryogenic sleeping pod, he finds himself crash landed on an inhospitable planet with three cadets who exhibit sharply different attitudes. None of them know what they're doing there. Neither does the listener--until the end. The story flows well, and the characters are almost always in crisis, with emotion rampant in McClain's portrayals. All in all, a nice fit for a competent debut novel. D.R.W. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

February 29, 2016
Danker’s debut tries to be hard SF, but is too shallow and thin to make much of an impression. A team of strangers wake from sleep storage to find their spaceship at a standstill and abandoned by the crew. The three newly graduated cadets and someone who may or may not be an admiral must put aside their suspicions of one another and work together to survive. Danker stocks his book with characters who never develop, places them in peril that never quite strikes, and lowers stakes even when he’s trying to raise tension. The nameless protagonist is saddled with a mysterious past, a drug addiction that barely affects the story, and a series of crises that never reach a critical stage. The antagonists are intended to be terrifying, but are as undeveloped as the rest of the characters. The action proceeds at a fair pace and is easy to follow, but there are too many clichés and conveniences to create a solid arc. The lack of definition and narrow imagination leave the writing flat and unremarkable. For a first effort, the workmanlike quality shows skill, but there is little to differentiate it from other novels in the genre.
دیدگاه کاربران