DISCLAIMER: My copy of this book was provided to me by the author, Ryan Skeffington, in exchange for a fair and honest review. Please note that all of my thoughts are entirely my own.
I wanna start this review by saying that, when it comes to books, I'm still new to the Sci-Fi genre, though I am very familiar with it in other media, such as movies, TV shows and video games. So while my experience with reading the genre may be limited, I do have a pretty extensive knowledge on the genre as a whole, its subgenres and so on and so forth.
This is a Grimdark Sci-Fi book, meaning that it's bleak, it's dark and the people in the world are desperate. The setting is in outer space, after humanity has ruined Earth with their greed and constant warring, which (presumably) left the place uninhabitable. Whilst in space, the surviving members of the species created a new system in order to maintain power and control, a caste system, with the lowest rungs being little more than forced slave labor, and the higher rungs living comparably better lives, though it's only better by the metric that they can live the same life day in and day out, working monotonous office jobs rather than slaving away mining or doing the work of three times as many men in a warehouse.
But a young man, named Maximus (or Maxximus, the book goes back and forth on this, more on this later) has dreams and goals to create a new world, a better world, one where people are equals, where the lowest castes can live comfortably and happily with their families, and nobody has to suffer. Along the way, he meets Ratchet, Kana and other friends, who share in his goals and values and attempt to help him create this better world.
I can't dive too much more into the story than that without getting into major spoilers, but I have to say, I do like the setting and the overall idea of the story. It may not be entirely new, but it is engaging and interesting. However, sadly, I can't say that I was overly fond of the execution of the plot, the progression of certain characters, or much of the dialogue in the last quarter of the book.
I want to start with my first and smallest issue with the book, the grammar. There's some definite grammatical errors beyond just name inconsistences (Maximus vs Maxximus, Pentalux vs Pentaluxx, etc. As these may be intentional), but a handful of small spelling errors, and an inconsistency with the handling of the castes. We have, in no particular order, Wraiths, Phantoms, Spectres, dredge, Celestials and Titans. Notice the issue? I used the same capitalizations as the book, if the other castes are going to be capitalized, the dredge should too, as they're part of the same system, and it helps to create better consistency between them. Additionally, there's a goal in this book titled "infinite existence" but it's almost never capitalized, despite being the name of a project being worked on by the world's rulers. It should be a proper noun and treated as such.
The next issue I had was the pacing, the book either moves slowly, or at a rocket's pace, with nothing in-between, and I found it to be jarring, it almost read like it was written from the perspective of being a TV show, with commercial breaks and one week gaps between episodes, where time is implied to have past by default, rather than like a book, which it actually is. This is purely a matter of personal taste, but I dislike this writing style, I find it weaker from a narrative perspective, and I think the book would have been better served by being longer, so that we can have actual events connecting what happens between chapters, rather than just jumping to the next sequence of events.
The reveal of the new "secret villain" towards the end, is also not my favorite narrative device, and this is yet again personal preference, but it's not a decision I'm usually fond of in any media, books included. I might have been more forgiving of it though, if I felt it had ANY build up. But instead, it just seemed to hit out of completely nowhere, which again, was jarring. And to make matters worse, their dialogue became very mustache twirly, which made them feel a touch too cheesy for my personal tastes.
I want to stress, that I do SINCERELY appreciate Ryan sending me this book, and this is a debut novel from him. I'm sure his writing will improve over time, but I can't help but feel like this one should have stayed in the oven a bit longer. It had some great ideas and plotlines in the mix for seasoning, but the story itself felt a bit undercooked to me. It's not a bad book in my opinion but, I can't praise it very highly either, sadly.
I give it 3 out of 5 stars, I'm hopeful the sequel will show improvement but, I don't think this one is quite there yet.