
Wherever Seeds May Fall
First Contact
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Narrado por:
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Gary Tiedemann
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De:
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Peter Cawdron
The Prince of Darkness is coming.
Comet Anduru skimmed the clouds of Saturn. Rather than being drawn into the gas giant, it skipped back out into space. With the comet heading for Jupiter, speculation is mounting it’s an alien spacecraft making its way to Earth.
Lieutenant Colonel Nolan Landis and Dr. Kath McKenzie are caught between an angry public and an anxious President as they grapple with the scientific, social, and political implications of first contact.
First Contact is a series of standalone novels that explore humanity's first interactions with extraterrestrial life.
©2021 Peter Cawdron (P)2022 Podium AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















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Oh, where to begin...
First of all: it's not a bad book, it kept me hooked until the very (rushed) end. It is a sci-fi as in there's some science in it, even though it's only exclusively about kinetics and grade school thermodynamics. Someone mentions something about nuclear energy further into the book, but nothing deep.
This introduces us to the next point: the only science we meet is rocket science, in the most purely americacentric way imaginable. NASA science, the most noble and valued field of science there is. Nothing else matters, no one else needs to be part of the picture.
Also, the writer tries so hard to be "cool" and to keep in touch his young / contemporary audience. I wanted to drop the book every time I heard expressions like "trolls" or "fangirling". At some point I heard "welcome to the dark side, we've got cookies".
Oh, and of course it wouldn't be an American sci-fi book if there wasn't the omnipresent hurricane disaster story! Oh no, that one can't be missing. The writer decides to waste a big part of this sci-fi book about humanity's first alien encounter talking about a collateral hurricane disaster as seen through the eyes of a very sweet Mexican grandpa and his priest friend who are taking care of children in an orphanage, out of the pure kindness of their hearts. It was just so embarrassing to keep hearing "padre" and "papi" over and over again, from people who were otherwise speaking perfectly in English all the time. By the way, this tear inducing side story adds absolutely nothing to the book.
One of the main characters of the book, a young female scientist with a double doctorate in astrophysics and quantum physics (we never find out how the latter had any relevance to the story) spends the entirety of the book fighting against ignorance and trying to force her agenda on the world, convinced that we must should always trust in science and we must silence all the inferior people who, out of their atavistic barbarism, are afraid of the oncoming aliens and consider them as a threat,
At the end of the book (careful, major spoilers here) they finally realize that the aliens actually came to destroy the world. After coming back from a mission where she almost died, she's given a chance to address the world. She's completely oblivious to the irony of the situation, as she's now screaming to the cameras telling the audience that they have to stop believing in false myths and stop spreading lies about her expedition, because the aliens are indeed a threat to humanity, contrarily to what some trolls are saying on the internet. By the way, the aliens were destroyed using a weapon that she vehemently insisted was not necessary. Not one single word was uttered on the matter.
Anyway, I warmly recommend this book to all those who are not bothered by blatant American patriotism, cringy internet neologisms and soppy hurricane disaster stories. After all, it was quite a fun ride!
One last thing: yes, there's a car chase scene.
'MERICA'S LITERATURE AT ITS FINEST 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
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Truly excellent!
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Really interesting where it leads
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Compelling and exciting all the way thru
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First contact goes nuts
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You want to listen to this one
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That said, my only slight hesitation was that I found the ending abrupt. Not that there wasn't an ending, but it seemed to just suddenly happen. So that and a couple of other confusing (to me) items are why I'm giving the story four stars, not five, but still an overall five (the narrator was very good.)
The inconsistencies were in the main characters, For Lt. Colonel, then Brigadier General, Nolan Landis, his career trajectory was an ongoing question. An apparently throw-away line said he'd walked into a recruiting center, but that would make his reaching even Lt. Col. quite the story in itself, not having attended the Air Force Academy. For Cath McKenzie, I kept getting odd contradictions in her description (tall, not tall, etc.) as if the author wasn't sure.
But those are specific to me. The science was first rate (as I understand it, not being an astrophysicist, just an interested onlooker) and other characters were solid (Andy and the president, mainly). But the ending seemed to have been meant as a twist, but one thing I took from it was that it seemed to somewhat validate the 'crazy conspiracists' (led by Andy) who the author had had nothing positive to say prior to that. I'm not sure if it was intentional on the author's part. But there wasn't much in the book that set it up.
But it was an entertaining ride.
Interesting concept mostly well executed
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Preachy righteousness wrapped in Sci-Fi
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How humanity deals with that, with less than two months to prepare, is predictable. But can we come together with a single unified plan? President Ashton of the US (a woman president!) is determined to lead the charge to meet the aliens, whether friend or foe.
Cawdron is from New Zealand, yet he manages to perfectly capture American society in each book that he places here. I think I've read about 5 of his First Contact novels, and he must have written 30 by now. Clearly, I need to catch up! "The Artifact" is next on my hit list.
Peter Cawdron has knack for First Contact stories
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Powerful story, diluted rendering
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