Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
From a Mayan village to an L.A. barrio to a chance to reach the stars . . . Part One of “a space adventure for the twenty-first century” (Nancy Kress, Hugo and Nebula Award–winning author).
 
Not much surprises waitress Tina Santis Pulivok on the streets of East LA—until the night when, on her way home from her waitressing job, she meets a man working on a strange, glowing box. Still, she thinks he must be one of those Caltech students who’s into role-playing games. Until his mind reaches out to hers . . .
 
Althor is definitively in the wrong place at the wrong time. An Imperial Space Command pilot, he was headed to a reception in Washington DC and somehow ended up here, though he’s not quite sure where here is.
 
As Tina helps Althor get his bearings, they realize he’s in more trouble than he thought. He left his home base in 2328—and now it’s 1987. At least he still has his starfighter, shrouded and in orbit above the Earth. But when the military gets their hands on the ship, he and Tina must race to reclaim it before it detonates itself—taking a huge chunk of California along with it . . .
 
Praise for Lightning Strike
 
“From the L.A. barrios to the universe! Excellent.” —The San Diego Union-Tribune
 
“A truly masterful accomplishment of world-building, an example of consummate craftsmanship and an impeccable feel for the technical and social possibilities that lie ahead of us. Hard science fiction fans can rejoice—the next superstar is here.” —Romantic Times
 

304 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 3, 2014

86 people are currently reading
207 people want to read

About the author

Catherine Asaro

94 books699 followers
The author of more than twenty-five books, Catherine Asaro is acclaimed for her Ruby Dynasty series, which combines adventure, science, romance and fast-paced action. Her novel The Quantum Rose won the Nebula® Award, as did her novella “The Spacetime Pool.” Among her many other distinctions, she is a multiple winner of the AnLab from Analog magazine and a three time recipient of the RT BOOKClub Award for “Best Science Fiction Novel.” Her most recent novel, Carnelians, came out in October, 2011. An anthology of her short fiction titled Aurora in Four Voices is available from ISFiC Press in hardcover, and her multiple award-winning novella “The City of Cries” is also available as an eBook for Kindle and Nook.

Catherine has two music CD’s out and she is currently working on her third. The first, Diamond Star, is the soundtrack for her novel of the same name, performed with the rock band, Point Valid. She appears as a vocalist at cons, clubs, and other venues in the US and abroad, including recently as the Guest of Honor at the Denmark and New Zealand National Science Fiction Conventions. She performs selections from her work in a multimedia project that mixes literature, dance, and music with Greg Adams as her accompanist. She is also a theoretical physicist with a PhD in Chemical Physics from Harvard, and a jazz and ballet dancer. Visit her at www.facebook.com/Catherine.Asaro

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
116 (34%)
4 stars
149 (43%)
3 stars
62 (18%)
2 stars
8 (2%)
1 star
4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Laura.
378 reviews16 followers
May 28, 2014
This extensively revised version of "Catch the Lightning" is well worth the read even if you've already read the original. I didn't leave myself a review to tell me why I rated the original three stars, but obviously I feel quite differently about this version. Once I started, I couldn't put it down - so in trying to guess what's changed (I don't have a copy of the original), I'd say the narrative flow is likely much tighter than it used to be. This book has everything I love about the Skolia novels in general: space opera with romance, strong & smart heroines, and enough real physics behind the fantasy physics to make it feel plausibly real. There's something about SF written by Ph.D. scientists - they've lived the life, they can make it real - this Ph.D. scientist appreciates the touch.

Looking forward to the release of Part II in the fall.
Profile Image for Kieran McAndrew.
3,090 reviews20 followers
June 10, 2020
A young waitress is saved from a vicious assault by a handsome stranger.

Tina soon discovers that Althor is not only from the future but is not even from her universe and soon finds that her Mayan heritage may be the key to helping her new friend return home.

Asaro's novel is well written and the story flows cinematically. It feels like a wry, self conscious look back to the eighties as a time period akin to the Stone Age. The blend of romance and hard SF is interesting but perhaps the pure mathematics and imaginary number resolutions to hyperdrive could have been toned down somewhat.
22 reviews
September 2, 2017
I really want to get part 2. I went to Toronto's gigantic science fiction bookstore.They can't find anything about it. It says on Amazon.com that the book is called Lightning Strike part 2. Does anyone know how I can get ahold of book 2?
Profile Image for John Loyd.
1,399 reviews31 followers
August 2, 2017
Lightning Strike (2014) 263 pages by Catherine Asaro.

In the Skolian universe some starfaring race took people from Earth several thousand years ago and settled them on Raylicon. The colonists discovered spaceflight and settled several planets before their genetics/inbreeding caused a fall back into a non technological age. Civilization made a comeback. Meanwhile Earth discovered space travel and the Allied worlds made contact.

Althor is on his way to Earth where his mother is getting an award. His ship is damaged and he arrives in 1987 Los Angeles, on an alternate Earth. Tina's mother, Manuela, is a Mayan who got pregnant when she was a teenager. The father left before Tina was born and years later they left to go looking for the father. Tina ended up in LA with her cousin, recently killed in gang violence. She works as a waitress and one day on her way home from work she meets the newly arrived Althor. They talk for a while and then she goes on her way. As she gets to her apartment she is accosted by Nug, the gang leader that killed her cousin, and just as it looked like she was in a desperate situation Althor steps in and helps her. Althor's damaged ship loses it's shroud and is captured by the military. He is desperate to get his ship back.

I read Catch the Lightning in 2013 and remembered most of the plot. I was waiting for my pizza at lunch, started reading this on my phone, thinking I'd just read a few pages. I read it all the way through, interupted by work, and finished it around nine. It was a fantastic read even the second time through. Asaro writes great romance. Whether it's Althor and Tina, Soz and Jabriol, Vyrl and Kamoj, Roca and Eldrinson, and the list goes on. The only scifi romance that I've read that's on same level would be Bujold's Sharing Knife series. The best part is that the romance fits in so well with the story.
1 review
November 7, 2019
It's 2019, where is the 2nd half?

I gave the original hardcover 5*s, and so I bought this digital copy. Imagine my surprise when I got to page 250 and it says 'second half will be published in 2014' ! It is now 2019 and still no ending, no 2nd part !
52 reviews1 follower
September 20, 2024
Amazing Fiction

A pleasant and interesting rather personal story with fantastic characters and very interesting reference to Tina’s Mayan background. A space love story that’s great.
Profile Image for Richard Balmer.
85 reviews5 followers
July 8, 2025
Pacey, readable space opera. Not especially high literature, and it sometimes seemed the author was more excited to write about the mathematics underlying the FTL system of the main character's starfighter than the plot or the characters, but a lot of fun nonetheless.
130 reviews1 follower
January 8, 2018
Fun read, and way less disruptive Earth setting than in Diamond Star, IMO. But why isn't the second half out yet? It was supposed to be out almost 4 years ago!
65 reviews
July 3, 2025
Creepy. As if a “Spock” stuck on earth is trying to make a living writing, with no comprehension of misogynistic.
Profile Image for Glenn Younger.
Author 4 books5 followers
February 5, 2024
My new favorite Sci fi read

Not knowing Catherine Asaro’s work, this book caught me by surprise because everything about it drew me in. From the first intro of the “read inside” function of Amazon all the way to the end. Good descriptions. Good premise. Good characters. Good action. Good translations of the Sci parts. In short, a highly satisfying read for Sci Fi lovers who enjoy a new kind of twist on the genre.
Profile Image for Kathy Gill.
34 reviews29 followers
February 1, 2015
The latest installment in Asaro's Skolian Empire/Ruby Dynasty series is an updated version of Catch the Lightning. This prequel epitomizes "sciFi meets romance."

Warning: this is part one of a two-part story.
Profile Image for Nicole Luiken.
Author 20 books169 followers
January 27, 2024
I read the original form "Catch the Lightning" ages and ages ago so was happy to get my hands on the revamped/revised longer tale. I really like the new details(?) on Althor's cybernetics and how he's integrated with his starship and how Tina interacts with both of them.
245 reviews
October 3, 2015
Read the original but long enough ago that I only remembered one scene and most of it felt new. loved it more than I remember loving the original.
2 reviews
October 18, 2023
Asaro

Enjoyed this book. Good for a travel read. Ready for the next one to continue the adventure. Where's Tina going?
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.