Fotografía de autor

D.J. BoddenReseñas

Autor de Nomad Soul

14+ Obras 46 Miembros 7 Reseñas

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The Voidburned Queen is the second book in D. J. Bodden’s new Zack Lancestrom series, itself part of the larger FiveFold Universe. In the last book, Zack escaped his homeworld of Politeia in a stolen shuttle, narrowly avoiding a last minute interception by the Federal Fleet, who now know that Zack has in his possession a very, very old super AI, the thing Federal Fleet most fears.

And now that he has gotten away in the company of a rogue robot, now what? I was very much looking forward to seeing the rest of the universe that Bodden had put together, and I was not disappointed by The Voidburned Queen.

Once freed from his home, there are worlds to explore, deals to be made, plots to be hatched [or thwarted], rivals and villains to challenge. The setup here is very much in the tradition of the classic space RPG Traveller, and the books that inspired it like Space Viking, The Winds of Gath, and Ensign Flandry.

The only one of those I have read is Space Viking, by H. Beam Piper, but since Ensign Flandry is by Poul Anderson I have a hunch I would probably like that one too. Much like these classics of space opera, the universe Zack finds himself in is harsh and cruel, but also full of opportunity for the lucky and resourceful.

And also like Traveller, the events he finds himself involved in alternate between politics, trade, and desperate firefights. Which is exactly where Zack finds himself at the end of book one, which leads directly into the events of book two. Where a series of increasingly steep bets pays off very handsomely indeed. The action is constant, the intrigue convoluted, and above all I just enjoy seeing Zack in action. He may be one step from a pirate, but he has a heart of gold.

Much of the flavor of Zack’s universe is borrowed from the Greeks. Zack’s use of a memory palace, the names of ships like Artemisia of Cara, or Zack’s homeworld of Politeia, openly modeled on Plato’s Republic. Part of the fun comes from seeing how all the borrowed pieces get put together in a new way.

While the narrative is well-contained within this book, coming to a satisfactory conclusion, there are plenty of other things lurking in the background to provide Zack with challenge and adventure for years to come. I look forward to it.

I received an advanced review copy from the author.
 
Denunciada
bespen | May 12, 2021 |
The Starborn Heir by D. J. Bodden is a heist, a caper, an adventure, and a space opera. That sounds like a lot, but it feels bigger on the inside than it might appear from the outside. Since book 2 is already queued up for release in May, you know that Zack Lancestrom’s adventures have only just begun.

I enjoyed The Starborn Heir, as I am in general a fan of this kind of space opera, but this book seems to have Bodden’s characteristic flavor. Nothing is ever quite what it seems at first. Zack, for example, manages to be rather likeable, despite his arrogance and privilege. More than a bit of a lovable rogue. Try him, you’ll see.

When Zack decides to throw away his comfortable sinecure in the planetary government of Politeia, it is perhaps the first real decision he has made for himself. Politeia is a well-oiled machine, and Zack has been in long preparation to take his father’s place. Unfortunately, that turns out to be not what he wants. What he wants, is the freedom and adventure of space [the space opera part]. But to make that happen, first he has to figure a way offplanet when he no longer has any money, and his father put him on the no-fly list, just to be sure.

Thus, The Starborn Heir makes its first pivot, into a heist. We get to follow Zack has he assembles his team, schemes, steals, and escapes. Zack hooks up with an old flame, hires a fearsome mercenary, recruits an engineer, and frees a very, very old AI. Any like any good caper, everyone has got their own angles they are working. But there’s more. Nothing is ever what it seems. The political machinations of Politeia, the factions, infighting, and corruption, are just a taste of the wider universe.

And what a universe we get glimpses of! As we move quickly through the different phases of the book, new and interesting revelations come quickly. For example, at first it seems like Zack's quest is mostly a bit of personal rebellion, but gradually we see that Zack may not exactly be the architect of his own destiny, that there is insurrection afoot on Politeia, the shadow creatures are spreading, and the star spiders are playing the long game.

What are the shadow creatures and who are the star spiders? Why don’t you grab a copy and find out?

I received an advanced review copy from the author.
 
Denunciada
bespen | Mar 23, 2021 |
The Balance is everything. It is what enables vampires and werewolves and far stranger things to co-exist with ordinary people, after a fashion. But after Jonas thwarts an attempt by the Order to take control of the Agency, the supernatural law enforcement that maintains the Balance, it becomes clear that the Balance itself is in danger.

White Winter picks up immediately after the events of Black Fall. Jonas has graduated, after a fashion, by testing out of his training with the Agency. By which I mean that he created an ad hoc alliance of human vigilantes, vampires, and werewolves to rescue his mother from her oldest friend, who happened to be possessed by a demon.

But that means he now has to go out in the world, and deal with the many, many problems that arise when you are trying to keep supernaturals both secret, and in check. I was particularly haunted by a program of the Agency which dispatched Puppeteers, vampires especially skilled in manipulating many people at once, to Rust Belt towns fallen on hard times. The vampire eased the misery of those left behind by globalization, giving them purpose and hope again, for the price of a pint of blood each, once every two weeks.

Of course, the vampire cannot make the jobs come back. All they can do is provide a more or less pleasant illusion for a few years, until everyone has built up an immunity to the manipulation, and the vampire moves on the next town. I am a live not by lies kind of guy, so I naturally recoil against this kind of thing. And I appreciate Bodden’s portrait of this doomed small town, because not everyone is OK with the deal. And eventually, the reckoning comes due regardless.

This is an interesting sub-theme of the supernatural world of The Black Year series. Part of the attraction of not just vampirism, but also far worse things that you will meet in this book, is that it provides a way to cheat death, at least for a while. Yet, the reaper eventually comes for everyone. The debt of life must be paid, and unnatural long life is often purchased at a price more dear than life itself. Thus the reckoning, when it finally arrives, is harder than it would have been if nature had been allowed to take its course.

This is probably a little easier to see if you don’t find vampirism attractive, as I do not. When I was a teenager, my friends wanted to play the White Wolf RPG Vampire: The Masquerade. The whole point of that game was to be a vampire, but I simply never wanted to be a monster; I wanted to kill them. This was a bit of a sticking point. I’d rather indulge in power fantasies by playing Halo or Doom.

Yet even here, neither vampirism nor lycanthropy make you evil, per se. Although they certainly do present some rather fierce temptations. While some do choose their condition, many more do not, becoming supernatural through being in the wrong place, at the wrong time. Thus, for Jonas and his friends, they must seek to do good and avoid evil despite the obstacles placed in their path. This is the core which makes this more than just another YA vampire story.

I received a copy of this book from the author’s publicist.
 
Denunciada
bespen | otra reseña | Feb 19, 2020 |
What happens when the AIs you create to run the world’s first VR MMORPG are method actors who take their roles entirely too seriously? Alan Campbell, and perhaps the rest of the world, is about to find out.

LitRPG is a hot genre at present. Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One is probably the most successful book largely about videogames, and lots and lots of other authors are chasing that success. I find my enjoyment of such books tends to vary inversely with how much time the author spends trying to recapitulate the mechanics of logging into a computer and interacting with the user interface of a massively multiplayer online roleplaying game. Fortunately, D. J. Bodden’s Nomad Soul is not that style of book.

To start, Alan Campbell is not your typical LitRPG protagonist. Sure, he likes videogames, but he is an HR generalist. I find that a bold choice, which has interesting downstream consequences. This is the second of Bodden’s books that I have reviewed, and I find that Bodden has a talent for characterization that I enjoy. Alan is not an engineer, or any other kind of technical specialty. His primary skill in life is smooth-talking, and this bleeds over into Viridian Gate when he bullies the lead hardware engineer into letting him login into the game after an all-hands meeting by the CEO and founder declares the project is dead.

Perhaps it is easier to avoid such a focus on game mechanics when Alan doesn’t have any natural inclination to solve problems by killing them. Fortunately the whole world within Viridian Gate is setup to allow for this. The world design has a pseudo-Classical flair, and a group of AIs modeled on pagan deities of the Mediterranean world run the game dynamically, allowing the game to adjust on the fly to what players do. Which means that Alan very much can succeed at talking his way out of problems. Most of the time.

In a refreshing change from many LitRPG style books, Alan doesn’t quickly become an unstoppable monster in the game, leveling up beyond all reason. Rather, when he does get in a fight, he tends to be beaten badly. He needs the help of others to survive, and to actually play out his role to do so. The capabilities of the AIs that run the game world make this possible, but their very capability has a hint of menace behind it. The AIs are not Three Laws safe. In fact, I get the impression that no one ever thought to ask that question, which fits in with the portrayal of startup culture within the book. In much the same way that Elon Musk has never heard of a process engineer or what they might do for Tesla, Robert Osmark doesn’t seem particularly interested in what might happen if the AIs you programmed to be gods start acting as if they were, as long as the game ships on time.

Nonetheless, I kind of want to play this game. Like Soda Pop Soldier, this game sounds like an amazing experience. It has that whiff of adventure that our world often lacks. Alan clearly feels the same way. The Victorian period strikes me like that. Not safe, at all, but possibly more fun. It helps that the part of the game Alan interacts with is ”More Roman than fantasy MMO” in the words of Robert’s assistant. In game, it is called Imperial, but the time period New Viridia is modeled on seems more like the Middle Republic period. Their social mores are harsh, but also just. The army is mostly composed of citizen levies among families of property, much like the Polybian army. However, unlike the real Rome, New Viridia appears to lack the structural causes that pushed Rome into endless war. In fact, their military has gone a bit to seed, although the have maintained a cadre for future expansion.

Out in the real world, Robert Osmark’s company has some shady connections. This actually feels about right too, insofar as anything the CIA tends to be involved in domestically is a bit of a cluster. See, for example the Church Committee. The CIA has operators, but they tend to be a little too whack or not quite good enough to be in special forces. Silicon valley in general owes its existence to defense contracts, so this is par for the course. And I haven’t even gotten to the ending, which was enough to keep me up at night after I read it. Bodden somehow managed to do something both entirely expected and unexpected at the same time. I hesitate to reveal more, since in de novo reviews I at least try not to give too much away. However, I can say I really liked this book, and I look forward to seeing what trouble Alan gets into next.

I received a copy of this book from the author’s publicist.
 
Denunciada
bespen | Feb 11, 2020 |
Teenaged vampire stories aren’t my thing. Fortunately, Black Fall isn’t really a teenaged vampire story. Oh sure, you have awkward high school romance and family drama, but you also have world-weary vigilantes, self-deprecating werewolves, and literal information gathering spooks.

While in general I try to avoid anything labeled urban fantasy, and vampires in particular, this marks the second time I’ve been pleasantly surprised by such a book. I just might have to update my priors.

One of the reasons I avoid vampire books is that they make me uncomfortable. Going back to adventure fiction’s Gothic roots, vampire stories are often metaphors for the perils of unbridled lust. Tim Powers’ Stress of Her Regard [Amazon link] is a hell of a book, but I find it harrowing precisely because it accurately represents moral dissolution from the inside. Anne Rice’s vampire novels were [are?] immensely popular because they offer sexual thrills. And this is why I avoid them.

While there is a sexual element to vampirism in Jonas Black’s world, Jonas himself is far too busy trying to grow up and find his place in the mad mad world he finds himself thrust into to explore it much. In tone, this book very much seems to be in the older Heinlein juvenile mode: some romance, no sex, a lot of growing up, and a crazy adventure. I approve.

There is also a bit of overlap with Tom Clancy style thrillers, and military scifi, particularly in the fairly dark, self-deprecating sense of humor the book as a whole displays. Especially the hunters, otherwise normal humans [well, they aren’t vampires or werewolves] who seem largely drawn from the ranks of veterans, who find out the hard way that PTSD and TBI aren’t the worst experiences of their lives.

It would be expected that nothing in Jonas’ world is what it seems, but everyone is running a plot of their own, so you really can’t trust anyone or anything. However, Jonas needs to find friends and allies that he can trust. I liked how all this played out, so I won’t say much more here. Go see for yourself.

Religion isn’t a major part of the book, but when a character shows up who is a priest, he absolutely feels like a priest should. I always appreciate authors who can convincingly write a character with faith, especially so when it isn’t a big part of the story. Bodden just wrote this priest the way a priest would be who provides spiritual comfort to the rough men who move in the supernatural underworld.

In a nice touch for the digital age, Bodden has provided a Youtube playlist of the songs that his main character Jonas listens to over the course of the book. I feel like you can a whole different sense of someone by what they choose to listen to that is hard to put into words, and I appreciate that Bodden gave us this window into his character.

As you can see from the review, what really makes this book is a lot of little details done just right. You can read dozens, or maybe hundreds of books like this one. So why choose Black Fall? Because it is fun, fast-paced, and funny. And because despite his legacy, Jonas really is just an ordinary kid who’s trying to figure what the right thing to do is.

I was provided a copy of this book by the author’s publicist.
 
Denunciada
bespen | otra reseña | Feb 1, 2020 |
An eARC of this book was provided to me by the publisher (and then I purchased the book from Amazon.com). This in no way impacts the content of my review.

Jonas’s life explodes when an ancient power sets out to destroy the world, and he’s the one who has to keep everyone together.

My first reaction to White Winter is… HOLY COW! This book blows the doors wide open on Jonas’s world. Not only is he dealing with being part human and part vampire, being a werewolf clan leader, getting a new job and a new girlfriend, and watching his mom be this scary leader, now he has to worry about trusting his own mind AND watching ancient powers destroy the world. How much can one poor kid take?

Bodden’s Black Year saga is really unique. The premise, the culture, the rules of the world are very different than anything I’ve ever read. It’s clever, too, and I really like it. I care about all the characters and really hope most of them can survive the next book. ;)

I might suggest that this isn’t a book you read lightly, though. There are a lot of characters and a lot happening, some of which is hinted at early in the book, but won’t really make sense until later. I wouldn’t consider White Winter a “popcorn” book — one you read lightly just to entertain your brain. This is more of a “steak and potatoes” book — one that’s going to challenge your thinking and keep you pondering for a while.
 
Denunciada
InvestedIvana | otra reseña | Mar 18, 2016 |
Jonas Black’s life is not exactly what he thought it was. And now his parents need rescuing from a nasty demon. Good thing he’s developing some neat powers and amazing friends!

Jonas Black believes he is a normal sixteen-year old, with school and a girlfriend and a normal future ahead. His dad died when he was young, and his mom is distant and just slightly weird, having a skin condition that keeps her out of the sun. But shortly after we meet him, Jonas’s world is turned upside down, and everything he thought he knew turns out to be wrong.

As you may know, I’m not a huge fan of Young Adult novels. I’m WAY past that stage in life and don’t really care to revisit it. So I was a little hesitant to read about a sixteen-year old protagonist. But as Nell mentioned, Jonas isn’t whiny or entitled or so freaked out by his challenges that he rebels or waits to be saved. He grew up kinda like me, actually–no dad, distant mom, only child (for a long time, anyway), and pretty independent. So when weird/scary/cool stuff starts happening, he rolls with it, doing his best to learn what he can, keep up, and survive. While he is young, Jonas is doing what we all hope we would do in his situation — making the best of it.

And, holy cow, weird/scary/cool doesn’t really cover it. Jonas encounters vampires, werewolves, ghosts, hunters, demons, liches, and so much more, each with their own histories and agendas. Not only that, but he is changing as well, becoming something far from the normal kid he thought he was. And if that isn’t enough, he has to save his parents from… well, he’s not exactly sure what, but he’ll figure it out along the way.

Black Fall creates a really inventive world, and I know this novel just scratched the surface. I’m very eager to learn more about all of it and in seeing Jonas come into his own.

Copy provided by author/publisher in exchange for an honest review. Review courtesy of onebooktwo.com | one book, two reviews.
 
Denunciada
InvestedIvana | otra reseña | Feb 26, 2016 |
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