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Galaxy Blues [Hardcover]

Allen Steele (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1, 2008
A new science fiction epic from the national bestselling and Hugo Award-winning author.

Expelled from the Union Astronautica space fleet and facing charges of grand theft, Jules Truffant agrees to sign up as shuttle pilot aboard the freighter Pride of Cucamonga in exchange for amnesty. After botching Pride's mission to RhoCorenae and upsetting an alien culture in the process, Jules must take part in a voyage across the galaxy to place a probe squarely in the path of a black hole as it plows through an inhabited star system.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This grand interstellar adventure exemplifies Hugo-winner Steele's skill with near-future tech and struggle with human interactions. Kicked out of the Western Hemisphere Union Astronautica space fleet, 20-ish Jules Truffaut cleverly stows away on the Robert E. Lee, bound for the Coyote Federation, where he intends to defect. Circumstances force him to accept a mysterious job as shuttle pilot for billionaire Morgan Goldstein, who's plotting to corner trade with the alien hjadd. Steele (Spindrift) makes in-flight technicalities almost tangible, and he equips his hissing, grunting, slithering aliens with convincing motivations. He's less adept at portraying the human crew who accompany Truffaut to a vast space city, where the interstellar coalition called the Talus must decide whether to allow humans to join. Subplots such as Jules's attraction to sexy crew member Rain Thompson and Goldstein's predictable big-boss machinations are tepid, even stereotypical, but a rousing climax rescues the crew and the novel from boredom. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In Steele’s new Coyote-universe yarn, spaceman Jules Truffaut has been grounded, unjustly, he feels. So he stows away on a starship to Coyote, arriving via a crash landing in a stolen lifeboat. To avoid deportation back to Earth and prison, he joins an expedition to the aliens of Rho Coronae Borealis, with whom a swashbuckling billionaire wants to establish trade relations. Managing to offend aliens and employers alike, Truffaut is tapped to pilot a mission to a rampaging black hole. Truffaut’s bad luck rouses speculation about his competence, but his determination and lack of self-pity make him a pleasure to tag along with. --Roland Green

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Ace Hardcover (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441015646
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441015641
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,029,952 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Allen Steele is a science fiction writer with sixteen novels and five collections of short fiction to his credit. His works have received the Hugo, Locus, Seiun, and Science Fiction Weekly awards, and have been nominated for the Nebula, Sturgeon, and Sidewise Awards. His first published story, "Live from the Mars Hotel," was published in 1988, and his first novel, Orbital Decay, was published in 1989. His best-known work is the Coyote series -- Coyote, Coyote Rising, Coyote Frontier, Coyote Horizon, and Coyote Destiny -- and the associative novels set in the same universe: Spindrift, Galaxy Blues, and the forthcoming Hex. A graduate of New England College and the University of Missouri, he is a former journalist, and once spent a brief tenure as a Washington correspondent. He was born and raised in Nashville, Tennessee, and now lives in western Massachusetts with his wife and dogs.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Return to the Talus, October 8, 2011
By 
This review is from: Galaxy Blues (Paperback)
Galaxy Blues (2007) is the fifth SF novel in the Coyote Universe series, following Spindrift. The initial work in this sequence is Coyote.

In the previous volume, the Galileo found a very large alien spaceship and sent four crewpersons to explore it. Then another alien ship came through the starbridge. The Galileo fired a torpedo at the alien ship and was destroyed by the premature explosion of its warhead.

The three surviving humans on the large alien ship went into biostasis within the shuttle. They were awakened by aliens and interrogated by a hologram of the political officer. They were briefed on the hjeed species and the Talus organization. Eventually they returned to human space at Coyote.

In this novel, Jules Truffaut is a former Ensign First Class in the Union Astronautica. He was forced to resign his position due to a cheating scandal.

Morgan Goldstein is the richest man on Coyote. He is the CEO of Janus Ltd., a trading house.

Ted Harker is a former Commander in the European Space Agency, He was First Officer of the EASS Galileo, the first starship build by ESA. He is one of only three survivors of the Galileo.

Emily Collins Harker is a former ESA Lieutenant. She is a very good smallcraft pilot and was the shuttle pilot on the Galileo. She is also a survivor of the Galileo. Now she is married to Ted.

Rain Thompson is a native of Coyote. Her brother Hawk Thompson is head of the Sa'Tong on Coyote.

Gordon Ash is a member of the Order of the Eye on Coyote. He usually hides within his robe and hood.

Ali Youssef is a spaceman on Coyote.

Edward J. Schachner is chief engineer of the Pride of Cucamonga. Doc has known Morgan for decades.

Mahamatasja Jas Sa-Fhadda is the hjadd Prime Emissary to the Coyote Federation. Jas and his staff live is a secluded area and do not allow many humans within the embassy.

In this story, Jules is working as a longshoreman at Highgate Station under another name. He works on a plan to bypass the formalities of boarding a ship to Coyote. He buys a ticket on the Robert E. Lee under another alias and has someone else board the spaceship.

After loading the last freight container into the ship, Jules sends the pod back to its berth under automatic control. He hides in the cargo bay until the ship is almost ready to depart the station. Then he moves into the airlock leading into the passenger area.

When the ship is underway, Jules shucks the spacesuit and walks through the passenger section to his private cabin. A steward notices him in the corridors. He explains that he had gone to the head upon boarding.

Jules finds Cabin 4 and readies for departure. Later, a chief petty officer comes to visit. After exiting the gate, the CPO comes back to take him to the captain.

Jules asks the captain for asylum, but she orders the CPO to take him to the brig. Jules gets away from the crewmen and boards a lifeboat and launches it. The captain points out that her ship is faster than the lifeboat, but Jules demonstrates that the lifeboat is more nimble.

Jules doesn't have much choice on his landing zone. After reaching the surface, he looks around the area and decides which way to go. But armed militia is waiting for him.

Jules is taken to Liberty -- the planet capital -- and jailed for a time. When he is taken before the magistrates, Jules explains that he would not have been allowed to board the Robert E. Lee under his own name and again asks for asylum.

The magistrates send him back to jail while they consider the case. He has a visit -- through the window -- from a man in a hooded robe and feels something strange happening within his mind. Then Morgan shows up and offers him a job on a spaceship crew.

Morgan pays the bail and gets Jules out of jail. Morgan also gets him a room in a boarding house. Then he meets with the rest of the crew.

Jules learns that their ship will be gating to Talus qua'spah with cargo for the hjadd. Ted is the ship Captain and Emily is the First Officer. Rain is the cargomaster. Ali is the helmsman and navigator.

Jules will be the shuttle pilot. Ash and Morgan will be passengers. Jas will be the translator and carries the key to the far gate.

Jules recognizes Ted and Emily from the Galileo affair. Ash is the man who was outside the jail window. Jules also recognizes Rain as a guest in the B&B where he lives.

They load the shuttle and lift to orbit to meet the Pride of Cucamonga. Doc has come from Earth on the ship. When they dock on the Pride, Doc gives them a small tour of the vessel.

Rain has been avoiding Jules since the first crew meeting. She is very inexperienced in space procedures. It becomes obvious that Jules had much more experience in moving freight in orbit.

Rain finally drives Jules to complaining to Ted. At first, the captain seems to side with Rain. Then Jules states that he would rather go back down to Coyote that work with someone with a chip on their story.

This tale takes the Pride through the Coyote gate to the House of the Talus. This turns out to be a massive space station. Hjadd take Pride under automatic control to a landing area.

Jules discovers many things about the Talus, including their readiness to use humans. The next installment in this sequence is Coyote Horizon.

Highly recommended for Steele fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of interstellar travel, alien cultures, and a touch of romance. Read and enjoy!

-Arthur W. Jordin
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars GOOD BUT HE'S DONE MUCH BETTER, December 21, 2008
By 
corey (south carolina, orangeburg) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Galaxy Blues (Hardcover)
if you've never read an allen steele book, please don't start with this one. he really is a great writer, but unfortunately this book doesn't quite showcase this. the plot is rather thin, the characters don't have as nearly as much depth as the ones he usually creates. i read it in a day and i've already forgotten the main character. still a big fan of allen steele though, and look forward to better writing in the future.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, April 20, 2009
By 
LT "Sci Fi fan" (Fayetteville, NC USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Galaxy Blues (Paperback)
Not up to the author's usual standards.
First the good points. This is an easy to read book. It flows well. It is a good book to read while spending the day in airports - it passes the time and does not distract or compel one with plot or sterling characters or such. Sort of a "B" movie book.
Now to why this was a disappointment. This author is a story teller. He is the sort that could take a day in the office and turn it into a riveting tale. His character development and story setup are superb. Usually. Not here.
Jules, main character, is allegedly the product of excellent military training and background. Yet the character acts more like a teenage drama queen. It is evident the character has never developed the habits of command or discipline. His reaction to authority is displaying juvenile 'attitude' at best. This bloke has never been subject to a military environment and this is a serious lapse for this author.
The mission commander has never commanded before from the very stereotype actions and reactions. Given that this is a dude (and his wife) who has actually lived with the aliens they were pretty ignorant in dealing with them. Given their also supposed military background they provided no sort of a mission brief or prep. Just not typical of professionals at the level they should be at.
Come on, hiring someone who did not even know how to don a space suit properly with no pre-mission training? I will buy the politics of hiring powerful folks girl who has no experience - but the lack of training or oversight is criminal. Sorry, I live and work with military professionals and such actions just do not run true.
Let me pull up short here as I am just running on due to being disappointed in this book. In summary, the mind reader is the most believable character. The rich guy's character is as substantial as smoke. The pilot, don't go there as that character is soooo poorly built. Etc. Maybe this was supposed to be a book for the teen age audience?
In short, the expected believable characters and development of these is lacking in this book. The sense of the author 'spinning a tale' is absent.
Do not give up on the author for this book. No one is perfect and his track record is pretty impressive till this clunker. And it an easy to read book for a clunker.
If this is the first book you have read by this author, try another before X'ing him from your read list.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The narrative begins . . . our protagonist leaves Earth, in a rather illicit manner . . . subterfuge and the art of baseball. . . fashion tips for stowaways . . . suspicious minds. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hisher voice, hisher head, hisher eyes, accretion belt, ceiling rail, med bay, cargo modules, docking collar, access shaft, throat sacs, maneuvering thrusters, cargo pod
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Prime Emissary, Loose Lucy, Morgan Goldstein, Union Astronautica, Rho Coronae Borealis, Captain Harker, Coyote Federation, Lucius Guthrie, Deck Two, Western Hemisphere Union, Geoffrey Carr, New Brighton, Lou Brock, Pride of Cucamonga, Jules Truffaut, Great Hall, High Council, Order of the Eye, Deck Three, Ursae Majoris, Starbridge Coyote, Deck One, Chief Levin, Alpha Dock, Cargo Two
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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