These Burning Stars

, #1

eBook, 517 pages

English language

Published Oct. 17, 2023 by Orbit.

ASIN:
B0BRJ6MRNJ
(1 review)

A dangerous cat-and-mouse quest for revenge. An empire that spans star systems, built on the bones of a genocide. A carefully hidden secret that could collapse worlds, hunted by three women with secrets of their own. All collide in this twisty, explosive space opera debut, perfect for readers of Arkady Martine and Kameron Hurley.

Jun Ironway—hacker, con artist, and occasional thief—has gotten her hands on a piece of contraband that could set her up for proof that implicates the powerful Nightfoot family in a planet-wide genocide seventy-five years ago. The Nightfoots control the precious sevite that fuels interplanetary travel through three star systems. And someone is sure to pay handsomely for anything that could break their hold.

Of course, anything valuable is also dangerous. The Kindom, the ruling power of the star systems, is inextricably tied up in the Nightfoots’ monopoly—and they can’t afford to let Jun expose the truth. …

5 editions

Good space opera

This has all the elements that make good space opera: extensively detailed world, with a variety of places and a variety of cultures; an overbearing, dystopian empire, with complex internal politics; characters who are unreasonably competent in their villainy; space pirates; space hackers; space sapphic romance.

Some of the plot twists feel a bit too twisty, but are more palpable given the context of the general vibe the setting has (which is established in a satisfactory manner). At times, the main characters feel a bit too constantly competent, often relegating other characters to the roles of bumbling fools, or passing redshirts. The book works as the kind where that happens, but given the quality of worldbuilding otherwise, it would have been nice to have more nuance in this area.