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Hostile Takeover (Tor Science Fiction)
 
 
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Hostile Takeover (Tor Science Fiction) [Mass Market Paperback]

Susan Shwartz (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Tor Science Fiction November 29, 2005
CC Williams is a financial analyst who's on the fast track of life and is determined to stay there. She clawed her way out of the hell of the powerless underclass and keeps herself grimly focused, with nightmares of either being frozen into a shipsicle and sent to the Outer Rim or dying slowly as the authorities harvest her limbs and other body part to pay off the massive debts she accrued getting where she is.
When the multi-planetary company she works for sends CC to audit the far flung Vesta Colony to learn why assets keep hemorrhaging away, she knows this is her big chance to make the Ultimate Career Move and be finally free.
Vesta turns out to be unlike anything CC has ever seen and the deeper she delves, the more twisted things get until her life--not to mention her career--hangs in the balance. CC finds herself confronting not just insider trading and fraud, but attempted murder as well. Who's at fault? She's got a colony of suspects, including old friends, old rivals, and a dashing EarthServ pilot who knows a whole lot more about CC and her world than he's letting on.
Will CC find out in time--or will the takeover she fears turn not just hostile but deadly?

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Heavy on finance and light on action, Shwartz's new stand-alone hard SF novel makes the excitement of space flight and colonization secondary to corporate kowtowing. Alpha Consultants LLC sends Caroline Cater "CC" Williams to Vesta Colony in deep space to audit an illicit money trail. While crawling up the corporate ladder, CC plans to keep a low profile. However, as she digs deeper into unethical trades, several "accidents" threaten her life. During a routine training flight with the handsome Marc Davidoff, CC spots an unidentified spaceship that may be carrying hostile aliens. Shwartz (Second Chances) sets up the plot so that CC and her associates gauge whether aliens are good or bad by the way they handle their trades. The not particularly heroic CC mostly gets praised for her good computer skills and her ability to remember and implement basic space training. Predictably, when she has to leap, whether to financial assumptions about aliens or into Marc's arms, it's only too clear that, regardless of logic, she'll always land on her feet.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

In a future of multiplanetary corporations and mining colonies in the asteroid belt, CC Williams is a high-octane financial analyst whose bosses have sent her to investigate a mining operation on the asteroid Vesta, where profits are mysteriously hemorrhaging away because of bad trades. A veteran of climbing the corporate ladder from the lower classes while constantly fending off rivals, CC is eager to prove her mettle and smooth the way for an upcoming marriage and extravagant honeymoon. Yet awaiting her on Vesta is a maze of political maneuvering, hints of insider trading, and an attempted murder that also yields the horrifying implication that someone is plotting a deadly merger with the potential to decimate the solar system's financial markets and even threaten humankind. Shwartz has several previous award-nominated works under her belt, as well as two rousing Star Trek novels, and her experience shows here in tautly paced action and a vivid depiction of Wall Street's interplanetary dominion a few centuries hence. Carl Hays
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Science Fiction; First Thus edition (November 29, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765343827
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765343826
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,185,137 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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 (3)
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars That's it?, June 2, 2005
By 
Jonathan A. Turner (Nashua, NH United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Hostile Takeover (Hardcover)
This is a book that has no real justification for its existence.

Problem 1: CC, our heroine. She's a paranoid obsessive-compulsive social-climbing insecure workaholic anal-retentive corporate drone. She's not very likable, nor very interesting. I grant that, within the tale's backstory, it doesn't seem unreasonable that she's the way she is--but it doesn't make her any more attractive as a protagonist. (She gets a little better in the course of the book, but not much, and not very convincingly.)

Problem 2: the plot. CC spends the bulk of the book doing financial analysis. Shwartz doesn't describe what she's doing except in broad terms. That may seem understandable, given that most people don't find forensic accounting that interesting--but it means that the reader has no way of following the "action". To make an intrigue story work, the reader has to be able to, as it were, play along--to experience the "aha!" moments along with the character. In this case, we're left on the outside, mere spectators to CC's (extremely repetitive) all-nighter computer ssessions, each of which boils down to the following paragraph:

"CC did some stuff."

Oh, and there are several attempts to kill CC, about which she does ... nothing.

Problem 3: the resolution. Any experienced SF reader will figure out what's going on around 1/5th of the way into the book. But when we finally get to the big climax, CC promptly *SITS AROUND WITH HER THUMB IN HER EAR* while a secondary character walks on and makes stuff happen. And then ... deus ex machina! POOF! Powerful benevolent forces show up--not through the doing of any plot developments shown in the book--and there's a magic happy ending

_Hostile Takeover_ could have survived an unsympathetic main character if it had had an engrossing plot. It could have survived a lackluster plot if it had had a good protagonist. Without either, and with a limp anticlimax at the end to boot, the book just sits there.

_Hostile Takeover_ isn't actually badly written, incoherent, repellent, shrill, or insulting to the reader's intellect. However, it's an uninvolving story about an unattractive person with an unexciting resolution. In other words, it's a mess. I'm frankly surprised the book's editor didn't red-flag it for a thorough going-over before it was released.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Don't read this if you might read the book, April 6, 2009
This review is from: Hostile Takeover (Tor Science Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Ms. Shwartz' "Hostile Takeover" suffers from many of the flaws pointed out in the other reviews. The most astute of the reviews (by Jonathan A. Turner) points out what makes it an unsatisfying read (that most of the story is not explicit where it should be); I can add to this that where Shwartz does hint at the analyses main character CC Williams does there are several hints that Shwartz does not really understand either how analysts function vis-a-vis everyday activities or what tools they use to do their work.

I can add that (as M.D. Womack pointed out), the writing is difficult to follow at times, with flashbacks longer than the action at present inserted into the middle of several episodes. Shwartz also continually needlessly reminds readers of events they had read just a score of pages before and relies overmuch on a particular form of inappropriate metaphor. My guess as I scrambled through the pages that "Hostile Takeover" was edited down in a rush from a much longer manuscript.

The only thing I found interesting about the book was that it is not actually science fiction at all: it's a romance-mystery that happens to be set in the kind of milieu usually associated with science fiction: imagine a Harlequin romance written in noir style set on one of the soundstages used for Star Trek, and you've pretty much got the flavor of the novel.

That being the only interesting thing about the novel, I couldn't imagine recommending this to anyone except an academic interested in genre conventions.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Different Kind of Space Adventure!, May 14, 2006
By 
A.C. Crispin (www.accrispin.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hostile Takeover (Tor Science Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Susan Shwartz's Hostile Takeover was an engrossing read. CC Williams was a different kind of character, and it was refreshing to read a space adventure with such a unique twist. In this novel, fledgling corporate auditor CC Williams is assigned to audit the business activities on the asteroid Vesta. The details about what it would really be liked to travel in space, and live on a micro-gravity asteroid showed a lot of research and thought, and gave this book a really fresh perspective. The plot was full of intrigue, and kept me guessing (which is hard!) and I applaud Ms. Shwartz for writing a hard s.f. novel with plenty of heart and excellent characterizations.

I recommend this book to all who like a rousing adventure in space that has a really unique point of view of the future of space travel.

-A.C. Crispin
[...]
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Three months out from Earth on the asteroid run and heading toward Vesta Colony, Rimrunner ceased its latest engine burn, and CC Williams began running for her life again. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
zap run, delta shift, survival bubble, electrolysis plant, screen blanked, alien ship, docking bay, pressure suit, emergency gear, travel vouchers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Gorsky's Hole, Margaret Lovat, Marc Davidoff, Final Frontier, Captain Aquino, Mac Nofi, Mount Piazzi, Alpha Consultancies, Olbers Crater, Ambassador Neave, Elizabeth Inui, Everett Neave, Morgan Nomura, Maktoub Prime, Alpha Consultants, Commander Davidoff, Jonathan Vinocur Sanderson, Peter Jordan, United Nations, Bloomberg Boosting Units, New York, Paris Space Show, Piazzi Alpha, United States
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