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Starfire #1

A Red Peace

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A Red Peace, first in Spencer Ellsworth's Starfire trilogy, is an action-packed space opera in a universe where the oppressed half-Jorian crosses have risen up to supplant humanity and dominate the galaxy.

Half-breed human star navigator Jaqi, working the edges of human-settled space on contract to whoever will hire her, stumbles into possession of an artifact that the leader of the Resistance wants desperately enough to send his personal guard after. An interstellar empire and the fate of the remnant of humanity hang in the balance.

Spencer Ellsworth has written a classic space opera, with space battles between giant bugs, sun-sized spiders, planets of cyborgs and a heroine with enough grit to bring down the galaxy's newest warlord.

210 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 22, 2017

82 people are currently reading
1476 people want to read

About the author

Spencer Ellsworth

35 books81 followers
Spencer Ellsworth lives in Bellingham, WA, teaches at a tribal college, plays in too many bands, and writes his little brain out. He is the author of The Great Faerie Strike from Broken Eye Books, about a plucky union leader gnome and young investigative report vampire, who join forces to take on the alchemists and sorcerers industrializing the Otherworld.

He is also the author of the space opera Starfire Trilogy from Tor, and his short work has appeared in Lightspeed Magazine, Tor.com, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Michael Moorcock's New Worlds Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, and a whole bunch of anthologies and little markets, and been recommended by Locus and other venues. You can find more about him at spencerellsworth.com

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5 stars
129 (24%)
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210 (39%)
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128 (24%)
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20 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 112 reviews
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,407 reviews265 followers
September 6, 2017
An interesting space opera in a familiar style that pits a victorious force of vat-grown clone warriors against their former masters, the human race.

Fleeing from the evil Empire Resistance is young Luke Jaqi who is of the same human/alien hybrid stock as the clones and can use the rare ability of the Force the Starfire. She is pursued by the minions of the Emperor John Starfire led by Stormtroopers the Vanguard who all wield light sabres soulswords.

It's all actually a lot more complex than that, and it's far from a direct ripoff of Star Wars, but the parallels just jumped off the page at me. I will say that like the material it feels so similar to, it's a rollicking adventure story with an engaging set of characters. Jaqi is a delight throughout and the other characters feel rich as well, particularly the drug-addicted and war-weary Araskar.
Profile Image for Justine.
1,434 reviews388 followers
September 12, 2017
An book that starts out fast and a little bit confusing, but quickly falls into place and grows into its own. The combination of interesting characters and creative, layered storytelling have me looking forward to the next installment, Shadow Sun Seven, due to be published in November 2017.
Profile Image for Scott.
1,425 reviews121 followers
November 23, 2017
I really liked this book.

It is space opera cranked all the way up to 11.

I would be remiss if I also didn't point out things that might seem "Star Wars-esque" - we've got our young hero Jaqi (Luke) fleeing the evil Resistance (Empire) while she grapples with her rare ability to use the Starfire (Force). Of course she's pursued by the troops of John Starfire (the Emperor). The elite troops, the Vanguard (Stormtroopers) are armed with their soulswords (lightsabers).

For about the first 130 pages (remember it's only 204 pages long) I was confused as hell as to what this book was about and why I was spending my time reading it but around page 130 it all started to come together (the confusion factor is why this is a 4 star book and not a 5 star book).

If you've read any of my other sci-fi book reviews you know that I'm actually not a huge sci-fi fan and in order for me to enjoy the genre we've got to have reallly great characters and dialogue and this book has them. There are two main POV characters, very different but both equally captivating.

Too much more about the plot and we'll enter spoiler territory so let me just say this was a fun, kick-ass space opera. If you love the original Star Wars trilogy then you will love this book. There are similarities w/ Star Wars but it really doesn't take away from the book.

I will definitely be continuing with this series.
Profile Image for Amanda.
1,205 reviews277 followers
September 6, 2017
Tor.Com novellas are becoming one of my favorite things. This one is an excellent addition to a growing number of first rate novellas.

There is a lot packed into these pages. I found it a bit confusing at first and it's not for the faint of heart but if you just go with it it's a good ride.
Profile Image for Michael Britt.
171 reviews1,994 followers
August 9, 2017
This is a pretty good book for only being 3 stars. It actually would've been higher if I was more into hard sci-fi (that's the equivalent to high fantasy, right?). Anyways, fans of sci-fi would enjoy this so much more than I did.

ARC graciously provided through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Full review to come when I get more time to write one.
Profile Image for Lata.
4,987 reviews254 followers
September 18, 2017
3.5 stars. A bit confusing, as the author throws you into a large conflict. Interesting and weird, the tale switches between two PoVs, Jaqi and Alaskar, one a navigator on leave, the other a vat-grown soldier. There are a variety of aliens in this story with one type, Jorian, having been bred years earlier with some humans to form soldiers, led in this story by John Starfire, Alaskar's leader.
There is an earthiness to the imagery in this story, and a mystery regarding a number of star systems in the Dark Zone. And music's important. And tomatoes.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for RG.
3,084 reviews
October 31, 2017
Some cool concepts and ideas but the confusing plot doesnt belp much
Profile Image for Jurica Ranj.
Author 15 books20 followers
November 15, 2017
Space opera sa weird/hard SF elementima i zanimljivim likovima. Veoma zabavno štivo koje se brzo čita i za jednu space operu galaktičkih razmjera iznenađujuće kratko. U romanu ima svega: zaboravljena galaktička carstva i tehnologije, fanatični klonirani ratnici, likovi svih vrsta, skupina moralno osviještenih junaka i zlo koje je uvijek u blizini. A tu su i mačevi koji se usijaju kad ih se poprska krvlju i mogu ti isisati dušu :)
Profile Image for Wyrdness.
500 reviews39 followers
October 2, 2019
The overwhelming feeling I received from reading this was that it was merely set-up for the next book(s) in the trilogy.

In spite of all the running and gunning, the chase between the stars, and a brush with what may have been a literal manifestation of evil, it sadly didn't feel like anything of consequence happened in this story. Even the deaths along the way, and there were more than a few, failed to get any response from me other than an "oh! ... Who were they again?"

None of the events were fleshed out or given time to really settle in the mind before I was being yanked on to the next, the characters were barely more than plot contrivances with an archetype stretched over them. Jaqi was The Inexperienced Chosen One, Araskar the War Weary Veteran , Z is The Last Guardian of Ancient Knowledge, and the 5 and 10 year olds spoke like cynical adults who were just there to carry the plot MacGuffin.

While I feel there was an interesting outline for a story here it feels rushed and as if it could have done with a few more rewrites to bulk everything out a bit, give the words room to breath and come alive a little.

Overall this was not awful, or even necessarily bad, just a bit bareboned and disappointing. A missed opportunity to be something greater than the sum of its parts.
Profile Image for Jeremy Szal.
Author 37 books295 followers
December 22, 2017
The first installation in the Starfire series is a space opera that's bursting with squicky biotech, funky worlds and rich story-telling that almost manages to be supercharged and surprisingly character-driven. New ideas are tossed out on every other page like so much candy, but the story never loses focus of the fact that the characters are the beating heart of this story. The jargon and made-up vernacular could have been cut back a bit, and the opening chapters could have swapped it's relentless pace to explain the world and it's factions a bit better, although things become clearer once you get a good third of the way in.

Tor is going excellent work with their new line-up of voices, and Spencer Ellsworth is definitely on the top end of that range. If you like space opera (and you *should*), then this bundle of gory bug action is required reading.
Profile Image for T.J. Berry.
Author 6 books108 followers
October 13, 2017
Starfire: A Red Peace does exactly what it sets out to do. It’s a rollicking, fun adventure with a group of relatable three-dimensional characters against the backdrop of a unique and enthralling universe. This is a quick read and a great introduction to the worlds of the Starfire series. There are unique bits of eye candy like soulswords, moth carapaces used as vehicles, and planet-sized spiders. And even though the book is fast and full of adventure, the story also delves into tough topics like loss and addiction. Definitely worth picking up!
Profile Image for Liezl Ruiz.
114 reviews14 followers
August 12, 2017
Starfire: A Red Peace is an intense read set in outer space with a plethora of characters that will either surprise you with their hidden badassery or shock you with their sudden demise. This isn't for the faint-hearted which is surprising when compared to other grimdark books.

Starting off this book, I was lost. And then just when I think the young female protagonist got good things going (she met a boy), everything goes suddenly dark. Turns out, there's no romance after all. If Starfire were a film, it would be film noir. As the book that it is, this is totally grimdark.

This review is posted on zirev.com

As disorienting this book was, I was able to keep my attention by remembering the feelings I had when watching the anime Cowboy Bebop when I was 13. I could not remember the plot (and especially the plot twist that shookt me on the last three episodes) but I could vaguely remember the feeling. Each episode comes up once a week so the feeling of awe and wonder lasted for months. That's what was happening as I was remembering all that in reading this book, I made the feeling last. Well, that was intentional when I started; finishing the book was quite a different experience altogether.

Why Cowboy Bebop? This book is also set in outer space. The original Earth civilization died (the solar system itself, if not the galaxy, has gone kaput). Humans thrive across the whole galaxy (or perhaps, intergalactic system as it's possible for people to travel at light speed) along with other celestial beings or aliens. For Starfire, a sinister celestial entity eats a whole star system called the Shir, like Dormammu in Doctor Strange (until it probably has eaten an entire galaxy) and what once was a beautiful galaxy (or whatever, the whole damage was not determined) turned into a Dark Zone.

The Shir... I could remember that evil thing inside the Ways in The Wheel of Time series.

There's three trillion of humans scattered across the empire. There used to be aliens called Jorians, who could jump from one galaxy to the next using nodes (let's just say Einstein's wormhole) and they could access Starfire, the believed to be this energy that connects souls and having a touch of it could possibly bring back the dead.

I easily noticed the reason why I find this book hard to follow. The author has used different terms to denote words that we normally use. I like how he uses a bit of realism. Language changes as time progresses. Of course, characters would use different words that are apt for their time and not because Starfire is a fantastical science fiction book.

Starfire: A Red Peace is a colorful book. As you fly from one setting to the next, the scenery changes, so does the characters. It also reminds me of those steam punk Japanese anime films with giant robots during the '80s.

I can't help but think of the game, Fate II. The first game, Fate, was basically medieval fantasy, having that middle ages culture laced with magic. By Fate II, it's still magical but then suddenly, aliens from outer space (not just one kind but many) came into the picture. The author has this nice way of describing the characters without you actually paying attention to their physique. Color and size don't matter, skill does.

I was actually struggling in reading this book. I just couldn't catch on the world-building initially. Plenty of things happen here and there as if you're grasping for straws or picking up up scraps of something and trying to put it back together. 70% into the book, I finally got a hold on how things run in this book. Needless to say, I got used to the narration and that's when I only started appreciating the book.

I really got nothing to say about the characters, they're all pretty dynamic. The main voice, the female protagonist Jaqi, is this special person that needs to eventually spread her wings and soar high. Meanwhile, Araskar, the male protagonist, needs to realize his full potential. I would love their character development in the next books of the series.

Like I said about feelings, there's always something about the image of space that will creep on me even in my sleep. After reading the book, some of the plot visited me in my dreams. What's more? When I woke up, it's all I think about. I couldn't believe that the story would linger in my head. Starfire: A Red Peace sneaks on my subconscious and whatever it elicits on me lasted. This is one of those books that you thought you wouldn't really give a care the moment you open it but will stay with you long after you close it. Simply put, the story was surprisingly exceptional.
Profile Image for Liz (Quirky Cat).
4,986 reviews87 followers
August 21, 2017
Disclaimer: I received A Red Peace from Net Galley in exchange for a fair an honest review.

A Red Peace is the first in the Starfire Trilogy written by Spencer Ellsworth, and along with an interesting plot (more on that in a minute) it comes with an utterly stunning cover. Please take a minute to appreciate the artwork, detail and color palette of the cover. I’m in love with it. As far as the plot is concerned, it’s a bit like space opera meets the Wild West. It’s full of aliens, giant space bugs (who doesn’t love giant space bugs?) and psychic weapons galore.



For more reviews, check out Quirky Cat's Fat Stacks
Profile Image for Jen.
1,434 reviews140 followers
May 25, 2018
I really loved this story. It's told primarily from two points of view, Jaqi's and Araskar's, with only the prelude or opening or whatever (it's the "Overture") being told from John Starfire's POV. Interestingly, I think John Starfire (the Starfire of the series name?) is the antagonist in this series. All three POV characters are what's known as a Jorian Cross. Araskar came from a vat, while Jaqi was born to her parents, who were vat aberrations that escaped before they could be re-assimilated for a new batch of crosses. (A Cross is like a clone. There are only a few templates and so Araskar lost his batch-mates only to have new "copies" of them crop up under his command.)

When the book opens, we learn that John Starfire and the Resistance have won their war against the blueblooded humans. He tells his Vanguard that now the real work - Directive Zero - can begin: I think he might be the series antagonist because while Araskar makes this observance. I liked Araskar, even though he was a Secondblade for the Vanguard. When the mission comes down to find children, Araskar is the only one who does NOT plan to

Regarding the memory thing, crosses have soulswords. They can set their swords alight by cutting themselves and swiping them through their own blood, and then when they plunge the burning soulsword into someone, they draw out their victims' memories while they're draining their lives.

Jaqi meets the children when an acquaintance of hers goes to them for food for her. She

The children are wanted for a black box that the middle child carries with them. It turns out later that . And so the hunt for the children begins.

Soon after we meet Jaqi, she . I really liked Zaragathora. And there was at least one line in this book that surprised a laugh out of me and it involved Z:
Look at this hidden depth to Zaragathora, Eater of Flesh. Kills---and does other things!

lol Jaqi has quite the sense of humor. I'm pretty sure I laughed at a later line, but I no longer remember where that later line was in the book. The line I shared is at the beginning of Chapter 7, on page 68, and comes after Jaqi notes that Z "knows his way around a cockpit." :-)

I almost cried at the end. It was a fabulous way to end this first trilogy book and it was beautiful. I won't share that line. Instead, I'll say that if you're at all interested, you should read this book! :-)

Have I told you yet that I am planning to buy the other two books in this trilogy? Because I am. :-)

To close my review, here is a photo I took of A Red Peace once I finished it on May 23rd and shared it to my Instagram:
Max with A Red Peace by Spencer Ellsworth
:-)
Profile Image for Emily.
4 reviews
Read
April 22, 2018
This book was hella fun. Violent and sometimes dark, but fun nonetheless.

The characters are one of the high points. Jaqi is awesome. She's also a type of character that I haven't seen much of, because she's...not very smart. She's brave and worth rooting for, but she'll only think a step ahead. It's refreshing in a genre with a lot of "canny" or analytical protagonists.
The book also manages to have small children as main characters who felt real but weren't annoying, which is hard! I was less interested in Araskar--he knows a lot more of the plot than Jaqi, so his scenes tend to be higher on information, but I always wanted to get back to her. I couldn't connect with his romance subplot--in a novella you can't spend time on everything, and that was one of the things that didn't get elaborated on enough for me.

Most of the book is told through either Jaqi or Araskar's point of view, which I thought worked well. Jaqi especially has a distinctive "slang-y" voice, which makes her come alive. Seeing the same scene from two perspectives keeps the tension high.
The action scenes are particularly well done. They're well described enough to be legible, but the pace never suffers for it.

I did find myself a bit confused about characters' plans at a few points. For example, the scene that ends with Jaqi meeting the kids: Why is Jaqi following Palthaz in the first place? Where does she think he's going, and why would following him help? The scene was obviously written to lead Jaqi to the kids, but it could have been less clumsy about it. There were a couple of other moments where I lost what characters believed and why they were doing what they were doing, though not so much that it hurt my enjoyment.

I do recommend this book--as a novella it's only 200 pages, but it manages to pack fun characters and cool action (and space bugs!) into it. I'll definitely be reading the rest of the series!
Profile Image for Ana.
185 reviews1 follower
October 6, 2017
I haven't read a lot of sci fi books so at first I was worried I would not understand. however, the action and intruguing characters sucked me in and I found myself finishing the book quickly and finishing the book with an audible "awh".
Ellsworth knows his characters through and through and I felt like it added a lot to the story.
Profile Image for Bonnie McDaniel.
866 reviews35 followers
December 26, 2017
This first book in the Starfire Trilogy is either a short novel or a really long novella. It feels like a throwback to the pulp age: we have a galaxy-spanning war, lots of oft-squicky biotech, a horror aside that absolutely gave me the shivers (seriously, that brief sojourn into the Dark Zone, with its planet-sized telepathic spiders consuming all life, is enough to give anyone nightmares), soulswords that vacuum up their victims' memories, one vat-grown supersoldier with PTSD, and a half-human half-alien pilot who gets thrown willy-nilly into the middle of a mystery that spans thousands of years and extends into another galaxy. This is a fast-paced adventure with some interesting things to say about addiction and the cost of war.

Since this book is only fifty-some-thousands words, there is not a great deal of room for character development. The author actually does a fairly good job within his length constraints, on the supersoldier Araskar in particular. The next book, Shadow Sun Seven, is easily twice the length of this one, and I hope Ellsworth will be able to take a deeper dive into his characters. But this is still a promising start.
Profile Image for Donna.
381 reviews
July 15, 2018
I saw this title on an issue of the Barnes and Noble sci-fi and fantasy blog and I thought it would be a good chance to read an author I had never read before. I like space opera, but often I balk at delving into a lot of titles as some can be quite long and extensive, and while this one is a trilogy, each book is manageable. This one was only 210 pages, so it was an easy read and very enjoyable. Looking forward to starting the second one when I get back from Comic-Con.
Profile Image for Peter Tillman.
4,061 reviews485 followers
Want to read
September 13, 2017
Publisher's Weekly review:
https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-...

"Elsworth’s debut is a capable, if familiar, take on revolution in space and what comes after an empire falls. ... This first volume primarily sets up the narrative that is to come, and leaves too many threads dangling for the conclusion to be satisfying. "

So, probably not for me. Cool cover art, though.
Profile Image for Teresa.
235 reviews22 followers
April 13, 2018
Me gusta. Voy a por el resto de la trilogía.
Profile Image for Matt Dovey.
Author 16 books7 followers
September 22, 2017
Technically, at 50k, this book is a short novel. But it's not, not really: it's a long novella. It has the focus, the energy and the freedom of weirdness that Tor.com novellas excel at. It's a novel with the padding stripped out, and a novella with the awesomeness given space to run.

It's a space opera with soulswords, with giant bugs as spaceships, with light devouring spiders the size of suns, creepy cyborg human/millipedes and half-human crosses and weird aliens and everything your 12-year self would have thought of in a rush of excitement. And it all moves so fast, and collides constantly, and rattles on a breathless race of activity.

It makes me wish I had a Starfire playset so I could sit cross legged on my living room carpet and play pretend, EVIL JOHN STARFIRE trying his best to stop our plucky action figure heroes before being knocked off the TV stand to land in the dusty corner. This book has that child-like joy of "but wouldn't it be cool IF", and it's infectious.

But underneath all that it still has real emotion, and struggle, and a desire to tell a story of justice and fairness and family. It carries all the excitement on serious foundations: never enough to slow it down, but enough to give it the structure and meaning to stand up.

It's a book you'll finish quickly; not just because it's been pared down to only the good bits, and doesn't waste your time with boring intermissions, but because it's engaging and fun and the escapism you want and need from space opera.
Profile Image for Jared Adams.
Author 16 books10 followers
November 6, 2017
"A Red Peace" does Star Wars better than Star Wars.

It's what I longed for when I watched "The Force Awakens." I so wanted to see a Stormtrooper fighting his upbringing, having an attachment with his fellow soldiers that kept him from, say, killing a planet-full of his compatriots. I also hoped to see an original story (ie not involving a death star). "A Red Peace" delivers on all of these things in a way that hits all the adventure beats of a Star Wars movie, while also presenting something unique.

The book braids together two storylines. The first follows a scrappy, illiterate orphan girl named Jaqi who makes her way in the universe through gumption and her special navigation skills. Jaqi falls in with a trio of children fleeing Imperial assassins and accidentally finds herself enmeshed in their struggles.

The second follows Araskar, one of the new Empire's vat-grown soldiers who is increasingly uncomfortable with carrying out the bloodthirsty orders he is given. Unlike Finn in "The Force Awakens," however, the thought of turning against all of his fellows is unthinkable. As an officer, he is fiercely loyal to those under his command, calling them "his slugs." In fact, it is out of his loyalty that his discontent springs. He feels these new orders are putting his squad at risk unnecessarily, that they are dying for nothing. Because he was made to be a soldier, though, because that's all he's known, his feelings rub up against the very core of his identity. He self-medicates with drugs while hoping to get through to a time when he can retire, resign, or even die.

On top of the unforgettable characters, there are cool spaceships, a universe full of different alien species and exotic locales, and an honest look at both how war can corrupt even the most righteous intentions and also how there are things worth fighting for.

An excellent space opera. I can't wait for the second book.
Profile Image for Jess.
567 reviews25 followers
August 26, 2017
This book was fantastic and fast paced and if you enjoy reading science fiction with flavors of Star Wars and Ender's Game you will really love this book, as I did. It was a lot of fun, intense, with memorable characters that I can't wait to see what happens to them.

Likes: Jaqui is awesome. Actually so is Z and Araskar. I loved these characters, they were funny and very cool. The world building was well done and interesting, I'd like more details. The ideas on gender and the nature of creation and sentience were also interesting. It reminded me a bit of Ursula K LeGuin's Left Hand of Darkness. All in all, it left me really wanting more.

Dislikes: Bugs are super gross. But to quote the book: "'Are you afraid of something?' Z asked. 'Think of what you've seen.' 'It don't make no sense,' I say, 'but a girls gets to be afraid of a bug now and then.'"
Profile Image for Collin.
9 reviews7 followers
December 31, 2017
I really couldn't put this down. It's over in a heartbeat, on to book 2! It follows two characters rather reluctantly on either side of the last vestiges of a galactic war as it winds down. But there's a slight problem in the aftermath that starts the whole story moving: maybe it's the humans that need to go...
The setting is big and bold, something like 1000 years into the future where more than one Empire has risen and fallen. The book holds has the mystical elements of Star Wars but is close up--first person present like the Hunger Games for strong characters. I really yearned for more backstory on important world elements: the Shir, Starfire, shards, Jorians/humans?, Suits, ahhhhh there's a lot! So I expect there will be more history and lore in the next books. Looking forward to them.
Profile Image for Sontaranpr.
242 reviews3 followers
September 1, 2017
You know you're going to have fun when the book kicks off with the promise of genocide on a galaxy wide scale. We've got a hybrid clone rebellion against their own kind and the humans who have been kind of bastards, as we do. We've got memory eating swords and exotic material projectiles. A dark zone in the middle of the galaxy filled with nasties. Bio-organic fighters and drop-pods, and we've got tomatoes. The last one will make sense in context.

A fun book I wanted to be longer. Still, there's another on the way soon so there is that.
Profile Image for Lucille.
1,480 reviews275 followers
May 24, 2017
More like 4,5/5 maybe! That was super fun and I'm very excited about what's going to happen next. I loved the characters!!
Will write a longer review closer to release date :)
Profile Image for Adia.
30 reviews
February 29, 2024
i haven’t read this but it’s my dads book so
Displaying 1 - 30 of 112 reviews

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