Paradise-1
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
An electric blend of sci-fi and horror, Paradise-1 begins a terrifying new trilogy of exploration and survival in deep space from Arthur C. Clarke Award-nominated author David Wellington.
"A superior space thriller that never flags....Readers will be on the edge of their seats." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Paradise-1. Earth’s first deep space colony. For thousands of people, it was an opportunity for a new life. Until it went dark.
No communication has been received from the colony for months. And it falls to Firewatch inspector Alexandra Petrova and the crew of the Artemis to investigate.
What they find is more horrifying than anything they could have imagined.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Wellington (The Last Astronaut) skillfully combines hard sci-fi worldbuilding with tense mystery for a superior space thriller that never flags despite its length. United Earth Government Lt. Alexandra Petrova is introduced in the human colony of Jupiter's moon Ganymede as she closes in on Jason Schmidt, the worst serial killer in Ganymede's 100 year history. Her efforts are unexpectedly stymied by her superiors, and in the wake of her investigation's untimely end, she's exiled to Paradise-1, a fledgling human outpost 100 light years away, ostensibly to conduct a security analysis, and ensure that it's "happy and productive." En route, she and her two companions—Sam Parker, the commander of their transport, and doctor Zhang Lei—come under attack by an empty ship from the mysteriously abandoned Paradise-1, leading to a frantic struggle both to survive the assault and to understand what's happened to the colony. Wellington excels at vivid descriptions ("The only light came from what reflected off the crescent of Jupiter, a thin arc of brown and orange that hung forever motionless in the night sky"), which further enhance the clever plot. Readers will be on the edges of their seats.
Customer Reviews
An Experience
I’d kill to experience the twist and turns this book gives again. 10/10.
Started out hot until the author indulged his need for tedious detail.
I liked the story at first. But the author’s endless expositions came more and more frequently. Toward the end I was skipping 50 pages at a time to find no resolution, no closure, only “end of part 1”.
I don’t think I’ll ever consider this author again.