Read Online Aftershocks (The Palladium Wars Book 1) By Marko Kloos

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Aftershocks (The Palladium Wars Book 1)-Marko Kloos

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“A new series that promises to be just as engrossing [as Frontlines]…the action just as exciting, the science just as solid, the tension just as high. I gulped down the first book in a day, and I am already eager for the next one.” —George R. R. MartinAcross the six-planet expanse of the Gaia system, the Earthlike Gretia struggles to stabilize in the wake of an interplanetary war. Amid an uneasy alliance to maintain economies, resources, and populations, Aden Robertson reemerges. After devoting twelve years of his life to the reviled losing side, with the blood of half a million casualties on his hands, Aden is looking for a way to move on. He’s not the only one.A naval officer has borne witness to inconceivable attacks on a salvaged fleet. A sergeant with the occupation forces is treading increasingly hostile ground. And a young woman, thrust into responsibility as vice president of her family’s raw materials empire, faces a threat she never anticipated.Now, on the cusp of an explosive and wide-reaching insurrection, Aden plunges once again into the brutal life he longed to forget. He’s been on the wrong side of war before. But this time, the new enemy has yet to reveal themselves…or their dangerous endgame.

Book Aftershocks (The Palladium Wars Book 1) Review :



I get that authors make money by writing books. The more books, the more income. But this practice of just stopping a book is getting ridiculous.First, the good. Kloos in an excellent writer. I aspire to that level of calm, descriptive detail without feeling forced. This new series has left me with a few questions, but there are still some excellent revelations and interesting characters.The bad (Minor spoilers), I'm reading along and there's a pretty good chase scene and then the book is over. What? Why?Have you ever read Tom Clancy? Because this book is like the first 200 pages of a good Tom Clancy novel. But unlike Clancy, Kloos just stops. I would have happily read another 2-300 pages of this book. I would have happily paid another $8 for the privilege. It really is good. But there's no catharsis, just a long, steady build up of interesting things happening all over the place and disconnected characters and then... wait until the next book.It is really getting out of hand. Write a book, tell us a story. I get that everyone wants trilogies or whatever. But don't make a trilogy just because the first book is almost 300 pages and it's time to stop for the next book.It's OK to write one complete book. I know Kloos knows how to do this.
For the Too Long, Didn't Read crowd...The book is a hurried rush that has a weak narrative and barely any coherent plot due to shifting between four main characters, who also suffer because of it. I get that Mr. Kloos was trying something different, hopefully to break him out of a rut with Frontlines, but the experiment was largely a failure and comes out as more as something self-published by a amateur author than someone with multiple books professionally published.For the longer review...The Bad: Aftershocks is a mess, primarily because of the focus on four different main characters through the short length of the book. There's simply not enough time given to establish the characters, build the world and have a coherent plot that builds up and ends on a satisfying note while laying groundwork for the inevitable sequel.The four characters lack depth because of the rush to put everything into place. One is weary ex soldier (which felt very similar to the main character of the Frontlines series, especially in the most recent hook), a angry racist soldier that hates her enemies, a doe eyed corproo executive and a frigate captain that felt very much like Saul Tigh from Battlestar Galactica.I believe that the book would have been better had it continued the focus on one character or just two. In the end I was more interested in one of the side characters than any of the main characters.The worldbuilding is also subpar. Unlike Frontlines there's no real explanation for how this solar system spanning civilization works. You start the book five years after a massive war (something that felt pulled from The Expanse) in this jumble of VERY generically named and themed planets, all given plenty enough local detail but nothing is explained in depth beyond the immediate locale the character is interacting with.It feels very disjointed and hard to engage with when, unlike Frontlines, you're not really given much of a reason to cared about these location but expected to all the same. Again, it is a symptom of having too many characters. A reduction would have helped the worldbuilding.Instead we just have this generic bland...mess that has no backstory besides Five Years Ago There Was A War. I honestly think we would have been better off starting with that, or at least some form of prologue that established the universe before jumping in. Frontlines did not suffer from this because of the singular main character and the time that Mr. Kloos spent building the world of that universe.The plot, what little there is, is just a mess. No spoilers here, but if you've read a Tom Clancy espionage novel, you've read this story before. There's so little central plot that this section is short. Hopefully Mr. Kloos Slim's down the cast so that the story has more room to breath so that it doesn't actually start going somewhere until 3/4ths of the way through the book.However, there are some good things to be said about this book, largely because of the little improvements that Mr. Kloos has made to his writing skills. The side characters feel more like people instead of just cardboard cutouts. In fact one particular character (and who I am sure will return in the next book, probably as a love interest) turned out to be the one I enjoyed seeing the most. His individual locations have much more detailed descriptions that allow you to better visualize where the character is, but as stated this comes at the expense of overall worldbuilding for the universe. His ship based chapters are also markedly improved, having slid downhill after his excellent second and third Frontlines novels.All in all, I feel like this was more of an experiment designed to shake off the weird...blahs that the so far final Frontlines novel had that made it so weak. The worldbuilding, characters and plot are so rushed and weak that they felt far more like a first time author self-publishing instead of a talented multi-book author with a professional publishing company. Or perhaps just a writing exercise that they decided to publish to fill the gap until the next Frontlines novel.Here's hoping that he either returns to Frontlines feeling refreshed and brings that series back up to the same level of quality the first three books had, or he doubles down and recognizes the short comings of this book and takes his time with the sequel.

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