Molly Fyde and the Parsona Rescue

by Hugh Howey

The Bern Saga (1)

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It wasn't easy for Molly being the only girl in Flight Academy, but getting expelled was even worse. Abandoned by her family when she was young and now tossed from the only home she's ever known, her future looks bleak.

But then Molly hears that her father's old starship has turned up halfway across the galaxy. Setting off to retrieve the old craft, she hopes it will hold clues to his disappearance. Accompanying her as a chaperone is Cole, her old flight partner from the Academy.

Molly show more can't believe it. She's now the proud owner of her own starship. Her Spring Break is going to be spent traveling across the galaxy with a cute boy. Could things possibly get any better?

Little does Molly know, they are about to get much, much worse...

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Molly Fyde and the Parsona Rescue (The Bern Saga Book 1)by Hugh Howey

It takes a fairly riveting book to keep me up past bedtime. That Molly Fyde did so is not that hard to understand when looking at the whole. Everyone loves those stories where the female protagonist is strong willed well balanced and determined. I think in this case the strong willed is the only thing that stands out in the opening scenes.

The story starts with Molly on a flight as navigator to Cole Mendonca on a mission for the (space) Navy. The first interesting phase of this story is a revelation of the possibility the crew is out so long on duty that members are allowed to sleep at the helm. Molly- an orphan- is having a dream about her parents leaving her. Cole show more wakes her up to have her check out some readings from their system update logs. Molly tries to shrug it off but Cole, who seems to be a paranoid conspiracy type, thinks something is up.

Now, some background: Molly is one of few if any female's who have registered with the navy to train at the academy to be a pilot and her skill are up there with the rest but for some reason this world took a huge backward step and is not very gender friendly in the military. So, Molly is navigating when she should be piloting.(At least that's the impression Molly gives us.)

While they discuss the discrepancy they also discover that the enemy force they are going up against is far greater than they expect. Molly shows her strength by issuing recommendation for their assault that turn out to be quite sound. No one takes her serious so only her team begin that maneuver. But, someone has sabotaged their armament and nothing will deploy properly. All of this reinforces Cole's misgivings over the update.

At the onset of the battle Cole is out and unable to help her and she has to take control; while the rest of her team is taken out. The other flights out there will be overwhelmed so Molly begins to do what she does best. Thinking outside the box. Knowing that what she's doing is suicide the reader get to see the side of Molly Fyde that might result in her own undoing. In a brave act she avoids the enemy long enough to turn their own weapons upon them causing some damage, though it in no way will save the rest.

She somehow survives this and you will have to read to find out.

The important thing here is that whatever sabotage happened to her ship- has not been recorded so everything she did makes her look like an incompetent loose cannon and forces her to be relieved of duty. Her uncle-an admiral-who has supported her through all of this can do nothing to help.

Molly opts to go to normal school to finish her education, which looks as though she's admitting complete defeat.

So we have Molly Fyde the strong willed not so balanced -out of the box loose cannon- who all of a sudden seems less than determined. Perhaps it's that she realizes she can't fight the system, maybe it's because she doesn't want to.

Though she has a severe failing in lack of determination. Molly in some ways reminds me of Honor Harrington, David Weber's character. Then in other ways she reminds me of Ky Vatta, Elizabeth Moons character in the Vatta's War.

In fact a lot of the beginning is like the Vatta stories.

Molly seems to be missing the drive that makes those other characters and it's difficult to determine, in this story, whether that's considered a critical weakness. It certainly might be a contributing factor towards her getting into so much trouble.

When her uncle, the admiral, comes to her with the revelation that her father's ship, which was lost, has been located she jumps at the chance to volunteer to pilot it back. Her uncle attempts to dissuade her but not much. At this point as a reader I was already a bit suspicious of this. Next her old friend and secret love Cole is enlisted to help. Add to that the whole affair becomes shrouded in mystery when they have to do all of the trip to the ship in secrecy. Cole is already suspicious and when the contact they are to meet in this backwater pirate planet is acting strangely and things begin to unravel the paranoia sinks its teeth in hard.

The ships name is Parsona -as is Molly's mother's name. It's her heirloom and in order for her to claim it she's going to have to think way out of the box and she and Cole will become fugitives running from the Navy that sent them there.

This book is one misadventure after another and the only thing the reader can be sure of is that each time the crew of Parsona go into a situation they think is going to be fine- it's not.

Pretty soon Molly picks up the most unlikely crew of dangerous misfits for her ship. All things considered the most passive yet dangerous is Molly who is in charge most of the time. The only thing standing between her and fate is the dangerous allies she's collecting.

Quickly we discover nothing that Molly trusts can truly be trusted and it all has something to do with the ship Parsona. Will Molly be able to stay alive to get all the answers?

You will have to read to find out.

Not everything is answered, but the ending is quite satisfactory for the beginning of a series.

Anyone who loves those tactical space novels of Elizabeth Moon and David Weber should love Molly Fyde. Lovers of Science Fiction and Fantasy should love the story.

There are several different worlds built here in this story and in many such novels, usually by the third world built it gets old. Hugh Howey does a fair job of keeping them all interesting. Each world story seems to add up to the motivation for each of the alien crew of Molly's ship. We'll have to see how well he keeps up with himself in the future novels.

Your Usual Sci-Fi Military Heroine who's been slightly Mollyfyde.

J.L. Dobias
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Hooks and Holds Your Attention!!!

I loved reading this Y-A Book. It is ageless, BTW.

The characters are terrific and the writing is interesting, humorous and intelligent (my assessment of the author, also).

Couldn't wait for the second book, [Molly Fyde and the Land of Light], and fortunately, did not have to wait very long.

Please do yourself an entertainment favor and add this first in a series of YA Sci-Fi books to your TBR stack AND place it at the top of the pile.
Very difficult read for me. The main character seemed to be walking on stilts way above the story, supporting character seemed to be stranded in a separate locked room, oh and the lovie /dovie old coot of a friend who was the villain was just overtaken by patriotic killer stupidity! The superhuman aliens were trapped by unbelievable weaknesses but were oh so lovable despite being incredibly dangerous creatures. This was several hundred pages of torture for a curious reader who wanted to know why the Navy was using deadly force on a couple of teenage gullible nerds... something that was never really answered in the book.
I’ve been reading a few YA novels recently. I think it’s because I like stories that start with someone who doesn’t fit in and then follows their journey to understanding that fitting in isn’t the goal, being you is the goal.

This book fits into that mold well. Molly wants desperately to be a space navy pilot. But she’s a girl and something happened long ago that changed things. Girls don’t do the same jobs as boys. The problem is that she’s really good at it.

When she gets a chance to recover her father’s space ship, she jumps at it as chance to fulfill her dreams. That’s when everything goes wrong.

As the first book in a series, this one does a great job of introducing the characters, the stakes, and making us want more.
Young Molly Fyde, 16 years old, is kicked out of Navy space flight school when she is judged to perform poorly in a flight simulation exercise. Several months later she learns she has inherited her missing father's star-ship recently found near a planet 3 hyper space jumps from earth. With the help of her father's old friend and Navy Admiral she is allowed to travel to the distant planet and fly the ship back to earth with the help of her Navy school training partner, Cole.

Once they reach their destination everything seem to go haywire for Molly and her Cole. So the adventure begins. They must deal with betrayals, murder, harsh environments, aliens and a variety of interesting characters from other worlds.

I really liked the story, the show more fights, the escapes, the other worlds and Molly's ability to keep moving forward to get to the the truth about her rejection from flight school and what really happened to her father. show less
½
Il romanzo - primo di una saga di quattro volumi - come dice il titolo, è incentrato sulla sua protagonista: Molly Fyde.
La trama è sul genere avventuroso - rocambolesco: Molly e amici si trovano catapultati da un guaio all'altro nel tentativo di riportare Parsona (un'astronave) sulla Terra.
Il romanzo è gradevole, anche se a tratti risulta un po' ingenuo (e.g le razze aliene, avvenimenti non troppo approfonditi...), si vede che è una delle prime prove dell'autore.
Leggerò prossimamnete anche i successivi volumi della serie, anche per sponsorizzare un autore che per me risulta valido nell'attuale panorama della fantascienza.
Well Damn! That's a cliffhanger! Off to buy the next one...

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113+ Works 25,087 Members
Hugh Howey is an American author who was born in 1975 and raised in North Carolina. Howey is known for his popular series Wool, which he independently published through Amazon.com's Kindle Direct Publishing system. The Wool series first began in 2011 with Wool as a stand-alone story. In 2012, Howey signed a deal with Simon and Schuster to show more distribute Wool to retailers in the USA and Canada. The book became a trilogy with Shift (Book 2) and Dust (Book 3) following it. The author has renamed this to the Silo Series. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2009-08
First words
Molly floated in the vacuum of space with no helmet on--with no protection at all.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I NEED YOU TO HELP ME RESCUE YOUR FATHER_

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3608 .O9566 .M65Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
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Reviews
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ISBNs
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