Friday, 12 October 2018

Artemis - thrills and spills on the Moon

Jazz Bashara is not your conventional hero. Officially, she's a porter working in Artemis - the first city to be built on the Moon. Unofficially, she is a smuggler of contraband goods. Full of schemes and serial bad decision maker, she has almost no money and is struggling to come to terms with the painful end to her most recent relationship. When one of her best clients offers her an enormous amount of money to sabotage the equipment of Sanchez Aluminium so that he can take over their business, she goes for it, figuring she's got nothing to lose. In true Jazz style - things do not go according to plan and she finds herself having to go into hiding to escape from the wrath of the shady people behind Sanchez Aluminium. They have murdered her employer, and are now on her trail too! The more she finds out, the more she realises that unless those people are stopped, the future of her beloved Artemis is under threat ... so she gathers a small team of friends and misfits to try and turn things around. But guess what ... things do not go smoothly and she risks destroying the very thing she is determined to save. Artemis, by Andy Weir, may be a love it or hate it book - the reviews on Goodreads and Amazon vary wildly. The less favourable reviews keep comparing it to his previous work - The Martian - but I haven't read it, so this is my first experience of Andy Weir's style of writing. And I have to say, it's a highly entertaining read. No, it's not high literature, but it is a fun ride with a good dash of science thrown in for good measure. The central character is a deeply flawed individual and doesn't make it easy for the reader to like her, but she grows on you, as does the setting - a city on the Moon ... what's not to like! Full of vim and vigour and humour up the wazoo, Artemis made me chuckle many times and it's definitely a page-turner! If you don't mind some bad language and a smattering of violence, then give it a go.

POPSUGAR Challenge 2018 prompt 28: A book with song lyrics in the title. (See Firedance, by Rainbow) 

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 320 print pages.
Price I paid: £2.98.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, MP3 CD, ebook.



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