Agent of Change
Sometimes you just need âpopcornââand this is exactly that.
I keep my book review ratings simpleâtheyâre either required, recommended, recommended with qualifications, or not recommended. If you want the TL;DR, this is it:
Recommended: Sometimes you just need âpopcornââand Sharon Lee and Steve Millerâs first novel is exactly that. (Just⦠pardon the frequent POV switches.)
At my friend Stephenâs recommendation (âa surprisingly fun sci-fi adventure romp. Lots of romantic tension, surprisingly chaste (and pretty satisfying) payoff [with] some of the coolest, most interesting protagonist aliens Iâve read about in a long timeâ) I picked up Sharon Lee and Steve Millerâs Agent of Change,1 and I quite enjoyed it.
Sometimes, in the midst of hammering away at work and dealing with the tumult of moving into a new house, itâs nice to grab the literary equivalent of a bag of chips or a bowl of popcorn. This is that. There was nothing in this book that was anything like as interesting or engaging as sci-fi can beâbut it was, in Stephenâs words, an adventure romp, and that was perfect. The characters are fun, well-drawn if never particularly surprising. The plot is essentially an escape story (and in more ways than it first appears).
The only real problem on display with the book is that it completely disregards anything like modern conventions around point-of-view. A paragraph break is sufficient for a total change of internal perspective. This drove me crazy the entire book.
Might I read another entry in this universe, the next time Iâm looking for merely a romp? Indeed I might.
Agent of Change is the first book in their Liaden series. Itâs also listed as anything but the first book, because republication and branding have dropped it at its chronological position in their larger universe⦠but book nine it is not, whatever Amazon tells you.â©