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Aetna Adrift

by Erik Wecks

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1621,312,989 (4)None
Smuggler Jack Halloway beat the system.... until now.With every aspect of his life controlled by a soul-sucking bureaucracy, Jack did the only thing he knew to do. He ran. He found the out-of-the-way places no one watched and depended only on himself.When Unity Vice President Timothy Randall arrives, he turns Jack's backwater moon upside down. On a mission that no one understands, Randall and his staff do whatever it takes to accomplish their goals. Jack quickly finds himself blackmailed, tortured, and enslaved to a ruthless political faction. When the killing starts, he must figure out who to trust, how to escape, and decide between the girl he loves and his freedomAetna Adrift is the high octane prequel to the space opera trilogy The Pax Imperium Wars by Erik Wecks.… (more)
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Disclosure: I received this book for free from the author for purposes of review.

When I received Aetna Adrift from the author, Erik Wecks, at OryCon last year, I saw that the book was a prequel to another series of books that he’d put out – his Pax Imperium series. Before I accepted the book, I asked if he considered the book to be a decent jumping point to this series. He said it was. I was a little unsure, but I accepted the book anyway. The good news is that the book is. It starts on a rough foot, but once it really gets going, it makes for an enjoyable read.

The book is set at a somewhat unspecified point in the future. Humanity has traveled to the stars and has splintered into a series of various governments. One of these is the Unity Corporation – a totalitarian corporate state, with internal politics that can best be described as literally cut-throat.

Out in the ass end of the Unity is the planet Aetna, an ice planet (similar somewhat to Europa) that is home to a hydrogen mining operation. On that planet is Jack Halloway, who is doing his damndest to stay under the radar, out of the way, and in the process retain a degree of personal independence. In this case he does it by running a small smuggling operation bringing luxury goods into the colony. However, when a Unity executive by the name of Timothy Randall shows up on Aetna with his entourage, and ropes Jack into his plans on pain of death, things start going very bad, very fast, and it takes all of Jack’s craftiness and a lot of luck to get through this alive.

So, Jack Halloway is our viewpoint character, and our lens through which we view society in the Unity. The problem is that life in the Unity is pretty rough and dystopian, some elements of which Jack recognizes as bad, but others he accepts as normal, but I, the reader, see as negative, since I’m an outsider. This is especially the case for women in Unity society, and it clearly comes across that way in the book. However, for most of the book Jack doesn’t notice it, because it’s either not a problem for him, or he’s in a position to benefit from it – and by the time that changes in the book, there’s enough other stuff going on that other matters are pressing concerns, until the very end of the book.

Getting into the positives, Wecks creates an interesting cyberpunk-adjacent world here, a setting that gets into some of the elements of cyberpunk, but with the addition of interstellar travel. Where this gets interesting in particular is that most works of Cyberpunk don’t get much into what life in a corporate state is really like. Wecks gets into that. It’s all the worst parts of real world corporate politics, with a side of Robocop’s corporate politics as well.

Aetna Adrift did get me more interested in checking out some of the rest of the original Pax Imperium series, to see how well those books present the larger universe. ( )
  Count_Zero | Jul 7, 2020 |
Are you ready to start your life again, new identity, new you?

It's wonderful when you recieve gifts from friends and when you also win stuff. I am so addicted to books, even more so than watching a good film on television, reading thoughts and ideas that people and friends have created.

A lot of these wonderful and sensational books you get so addicted to, you just fall into other worlds so much it just makes it feel as tho this is happening to you yourself. But quite often if the book is that good, and you find yourself so engrossed into the story, you can actually see and hear all the action; so it's usually better than just watching a film, just by letting the imagination run wild.

'Stand on the X"

Pilotless taxis that can hover, wow I'm so in my element.

Couples that had spend their whole relationship in their heads, but have never actually met in RL

Could you actually go on holiday by not even leaving your home? Your human form has the ability to change into another animal?

You have to leave your old life behind completely, you will be born again, you will hold a new identity - new name, speak differently, be somebody else but not the old you., could you manage all that?

You might suddenly get to meet someone that's exactly like you in every single way possible, and that's when you suddenly wake up to yourself. Realise you can't carry on living your life like that, you've got to grow up, you've got to make that one biggest decision of your life if your ever gonna be happy or not.

I would like to say a big thanks to you Erik for offering this to us at BL giving me this opportunity to read your work. ( )
  BarbeloAngel | May 6, 2014 |
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Smuggler Jack Halloway beat the system.... until now.With every aspect of his life controlled by a soul-sucking bureaucracy, Jack did the only thing he knew to do. He ran. He found the out-of-the-way places no one watched and depended only on himself.When Unity Vice President Timothy Randall arrives, he turns Jack's backwater moon upside down. On a mission that no one understands, Randall and his staff do whatever it takes to accomplish their goals. Jack quickly finds himself blackmailed, tortured, and enslaved to a ruthless political faction. When the killing starts, he must figure out who to trust, how to escape, and decide between the girl he loves and his freedomAetna Adrift is the high octane prequel to the space opera trilogy The Pax Imperium Wars by Erik Wecks.

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