Saturday, June 16, 2012

Book Review: Alexander Outland: Space Pirate


Alexander Outland: Space Pirate, by G.J. Koch hits all the right notes. It's science fiction, which I so desperately crave these days. It has space battles, humor, gun battles, robots, pirates... yeah, it's good.

Alexander Outland is the captain of a small group of close-knit pirates. Think Firefly without the horses (oh wait, there were donkeys, never mind). Outland is a womanizer but has his heart set on one specific woman, and he can't keep her assets out of his thoughts. The book is told in first-person, from Outland's point-of-view, and his internal dialogue with himself is just as fun as his actual conversations with other characters.

Outland's crew consists of a super-talented but somewhat dimwitted engineer and his robot fiance that he built from a rare instruction manual, an elderly planetary governor that Outland's crew accidentally help depose, and the object of Outland's affections: his attractive weapons chief that wants nothing to do with Outland.

The book opens with Outland deciding not to land on a planet where his exploits with some prominent local women are a little too well-known. Instead, he heads to what should be a safe haven but ends up in a battle with an invisible pirate armada that tries to capture him. Outland lives up to his reputation as the best pilot in the galaxy as he escapes and lands on the nearby planet the armada is blockading.

From there, Outland and his crew spend time trying to relax between bouts of being arrested, chased through the sewers, avoiding a stampede, meeting a spy, learning secrets about each other, picking up new crew members, and trying to defeat that pirate armada all by themselves.

It's quite a ride. And it's a blast! My summary doesn't do the story justice - it's just. that. good.


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