(Starbound #1)
Publication
Date: December 10, 2013
Hardcover, 378 pages, Disney Hyperion
Genres:
YA, Sci-Fi
Luxury spaceliner Icarus suddenly
plummets from hyperspace into the nearest planet. Lilac LaRoux and Tarver
Merendsen survive -- alone. Lilac is the daughter of the richest man in the
universe. Tarver comes from nothing, a cynical war hero. Both journey across
the eerie deserted terrain for help. Everything changes when they uncover the
truth.
The Starbound Trilogy: Three
worlds. Three love stories. One enemy.
My Review
The Titanic in
space is how I’ve always heard this book described, and that fits about 25%
percent of the book. The other 75% is more like a PG, sci-fi edition of Blue Lagoon. And for obvious reasons,
those two descriptions mash up really well.
The book starts out with two people who lust after/hate each
other and of course that type of relationship can never go wrong in my opinion.
I love seeing two people with strong negative feelings towards each get forced
into interacting only with each other later on in the story. It makes me giggle
and evil-manic laugh. Tarver and Lilac proved the trope true again since they
supplied me with both giggles and some mwah-ha-has.
In fact, the character development of both of the two main
characters (and really the only two characters since 85% of the book is just the
two of them) makes for a great, if overly done, story. Tarver is the tough,
small-town, military guy, who loathes all of the fru-fru-ness of the rich,
uppity peoples’ lives, while Lilac is a rich, fru-fru girl with some secrets
and tricks up her sleeve. Like I said, this relationship dynamic has been done
many times before, but there’s a reason for it—it works. Tarver is sexy and
macho and Lilac grows into her own once she knows what she’s doing.
Despite how much I loved the characters in this book, the
plot had me a little “Huh?” at some points. The Titanic and Blue Lagoon
aspects are wonderful plot pieces. I enjoyed every second of the back-and-forth
between the characters and the obstacles they faced while having those fights.
I mean, who couldn’t resist a survival story with a hunky military boy leading
the show? Not me, that’s who. But I was expecting this story to stay in the
realm of realistic sci-fi. (Realistic sci-fi. Haha.) I just didn’t expect some
of the creepy and strange things that happened in the book to actually happen.
I felt like the story got a little muddled in these areas. However, I still
enjoyed the overarching plot, just not some of the weirdness that happened in
between plot points.
All in all, These
Broken Stars is a must-read for any Star
Trek and/or Star Wars fan who
loves romantic stories like Jack Dawson and Rose DeWitt Bukater’s epic love
story.
*Note: I purchased
a copy of this book for myself.
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