The mysterious and powerful Starseers have Captain Alisa Marchenko's daughter, and she will do whatever she must to get her back, even if it means traveling to their stronghold and confronting them personally. Unfortunately, her strongest ally, the cyborg Leonidas, may become a liability since the cyborgs and the Starseers have a long history of hating each other. It doesn’t help that Leonidas and Dr. Dominguez have a mission of their own, one that could jeopardize all that Alisa is fighting for.
Review of 'Starseers (Fallen Empire) (Volume 3)' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Session 3 of the campaign sees the introduction of the Jedi... sorry... Starseers.
Starseekers?
Again, short and enjoyable if you enjoy reading someone's RPG session reports turned into book.
Not sure if I care enough to continue reading the series though. I got books 1-3 as part of a bundle deal... and the individual ones following are a bit more than I'd like to spend.
Review of 'Starseers (Fallen Empire) (Volume 3)' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Alisa, Leonidas, Dr. Dominguez, Yumi and Mica continue their journey to the starseer temple with the usual chaos that follows them everywhere. It was nice to see a bit more about Yumi's relationship with her mother, and the relationship between Leonidas and Alisa continues to simmer and seems to become even more blatant with both parties aware of it now.
I wouldn't call any of the Fallen Empire books exactly serious. They're a fun filled romp through space, and this one doesn't break that trend. The characters are fun, filled with personality, and have a life outside a single one of their numbers motivation. [a:Lindsay Buroker|4512224|Lindsay Buroker|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1292869920p2/4512224.jpg] has done a great job continuing this series.
My only complaint would be that the book does feel almost two similar to the others in the series, and while I had a break between the previous two and this one, you might feel …
Alisa, Leonidas, Dr. Dominguez, Yumi and Mica continue their journey to the starseer temple with the usual chaos that follows them everywhere. It was nice to see a bit more about Yumi's relationship with her mother, and the relationship between Leonidas and Alisa continues to simmer and seems to become even more blatant with both parties aware of it now.
I wouldn't call any of the Fallen Empire books exactly serious. They're a fun filled romp through space, and this one doesn't break that trend. The characters are fun, filled with personality, and have a life outside a single one of their numbers motivation. [a:Lindsay Buroker|4512224|Lindsay Buroker|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1292869920p2/4512224.jpg] has done a great job continuing this series.
My only complaint would be that the book does feel almost two similar to the others in the series, and while I had a break between the previous two and this one, you might feel a bit of story fatigue if you read them in quick succession.
My final word is that if you liked the previous books, and wanted more of the same, you'll love this.