hardcover, 400 pages

Publié 2 avril 2019 par DAW.

ISBN :
978-0-7564-1510-5
ISBN copié !

Voir sur OpenLibrary

Fergus Ferguson has been called a lot of names: thief, con artist, repo man. He prefers the term finder.

His latest job should be simple. Find the spacecraft Venetia's Sword and steal it back from Arum Gilger, ex-nobleman turned power-hungry trade boss. Hell slip in, decode the ships compromised AI security, and get out of town, Sword in hand.

Fergus locates both Gilger and the ship in the farthest corner of human-inhabited space, a backwater deep space colony called Cernee. But Fergus arrival at the colony is anything but simple. A cable car explosion launches Cernee into civil war, and Fergus must ally with Gilgers enemies to navigate a field of space mines and a small army of hostile mercenaries. What was supposed to be a routine job evolves into negotiating a power struggle between factions. Even worse, Fergus has become increasingly and inconveniently invested in the …

4 éditions

a publié une critique de Finder par Suzanne Palmer (Finder Chronicles, #1)

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It'd be the easiest thing in the world to just call this "MacGuyver but in space" (and you'd be mostly right to do so!), but that leaves out the sheer, improbable luck this protagonist experiences that really tested my suspension of disbelief.

I don't want to use the term "Mary Sue" too flippantly, but our main character, Fergus Ferguson (yes, that's his real name and yes, other characters have the same knee-jerk reaction I did upon hearing it), is a little too neat of a package for me. Even now having finished the book I struggle to think of a major character flaw beyond, "survivor's guilt, sorta kinda?" He's clearly meant to be likeable, but when you're so much of a nice guy out of the gate and you're pretty much the same at the end of the story, why am I as a reader compelled to follow you?