As I continue to read modern space operas, I'm noticing (perhaps belatedly) some strong general themes:
- Written by women
- Usually include banter/smartasses/clever dialog
- Strong female leads
- Lots of queer characters and queer relationships
- Romance is common, as are found families, scrappy space rebels (think Harrison Ford), and AIs
Full Speed to a Crash Landing by Beth Revis (published 2024)
This one had intrigue, banter/smart ass comments, and a hint of romance (or at least passing lust). So, in some ways it's a mirror of Calamity by Constance Fey. But Calamity is a romance and Full Speed is a sexy space heist. Full Speed is told in the first person, by an unreliable narrator, and is about a galactic salvager/scavenger who is rescued as she's running out of air by an official government salvage crew who's come to investigate the wreck that she's plundering.
Parallels with my work: banter, spaceships
The Floating Hotel by Grace Curtis (published 2024)
Can I complain that a book isn't what I expected if it delivers exactly what's on the tin? I ordered this after reading its Amazon preview pages, and thought that it was going to be about Carl, the abused orphan from a terrible mining planet who is kindly taken in by the staff of a luxury hotel spaceship (the Grand Abeona). Instead, the book is fundamentally about....drumrollllll....the hotel itself.
Each chapter follows a different character (although Carl, who becomes manager, does get a few), and together the characters' stories tell us about the Galactic Empire that the hotel traverses and gradually, all about the hotel itself. At the heart of the book is a mystery, which creates an overarching plot that emerges from the individual character's stories.
I thought the book was very well done. It was engaging, had well-developed and believable characters, and the overall conceit was well-executed in that the many threads came together to build to a "surprising but inevitable" conclusion (which is the goal of a mystery plot!)
This is advertised as a cozy and I can see why: Carl (and the culture of the ship) is kind, you can describe the collection of characters as a found family, and the premise of a luxury interstellar floating hotel staffed by waifs who love their work is fundamentally sweet. But there is a dark heart here: an oppressive Galactic Empire with a sadistic agent who uses torture as a tool. I find it hard to categorize any book that includes torture as cozy, even if the perpetrator eventually faces consequences (albeit for murdering a colleague, not for the torture itself).
Parallels with my work: oppressive Galactic Empire, spaceships, most characters are decent and doing their best
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