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The Salvage Crew Kindle Edition
| Yudhanjaya Wijeratne (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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They thought this was just another salvage job. They thought wrong.
An AI overseer and a human crew arrive on a distant planet to salvage an ancient UN starship. The overseer is unhappy. The crew, well, they're certainly no A-team. Not even a C-team on the best of days.
And worse? Urmahon Beta, the planet, is at the ass-end of nowhere. Everybody expects this to be a long, ugly, and thankless job.
Then it all goes disastrously wrong. What they thought was an uninhabited backwater turns out to be anything but empty. Megafauna roam the land, a rival crew with some terrifyingly high-powered gear haunts the dig site, and a secret that will change humanity forever is waiting in the darkness.
Stuck on this unmapped, hostile planet, lacking resources, and with tech built by the cheapest bidder, the salvage crew must engineer their way to payday...and beat Urmahon Beta before it kills them all.
Experience this space exploration adventure told from the perspective of a snarky artificial intelligence you won't soon forget. It's perfect for fans of The Martian, Red Dwarf, Firefly, and We Are Legion (We Are Bob).
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 27, 2020
- File size4989 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"A classic science fiction adventure wrapped around a deeply philosophical core... what begins as a space opera evolves through a series of escalations into an exploration of life itself, with an ending worth waiting for." - S.B. Divya, Hugo and Nebula nominated author of Runtime
"Not only conceiving of the kinds of problems we'd face in the future, but also the solutions, practices and technologies we'd eventually come up with. Add to that the characters- finally, an AI inner monologue I can relate to." - Nathan Fillion, Firefly, Serenity and Castle
Product details
- ASIN : B08J977YVQ
- Publisher : Aethon Books (October 27, 2020)
- Publication date : October 27, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 4989 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 304 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #231,816 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #690 in Hard Science Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #1,964 in First Contact Science Fiction eBooks
- #2,312 in Space Opera Science Fiction (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Yudhanjaya Wijeratne is the Nebula Award-nominated author of Numbercaste, The Inhuman Race, and several other stories. He works as a researcher with the Data, Algorithms and Policy team at LIRNEasia, a think tank working across the Global South; he also cofounded Watchdog Sri Lanka, a factchecker.
Find him online at www.yudhanjaya.com or @yudhanjaya on Twitter.
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But the book as an insane amount of profanity... couldn't enjoy much of it for I stopped before they got far. And this story has an amazing plot and view point from Nathan Fillion's character. Wish they had a censored version 😕 😪 😔 😞 😢 😒
I'm concerned that profanity has influenced and convinced people that it's necessary to be apart of all aspects of life. We are approaching a time where profanity will truly be apart of language and then more horrible words surface becoming the new bads words.
But you know what's worst? Toe sizes! Why don't they all match!
From The Salvage Crew by Yudhanjaya Wijeratne
There couldn’t have been a better year, I think, for The Salvage Crew to be in the world, because Urmagon Beta treats the members of the titular crew, like 2020 is treating us Earthlings — they just can’t catch a break.
You will have heard, if you’ve heard of this book before, about how the poetry in it was co-written by open source AI, how the planet itself was created by a modified version of a planet generator, and how the weather on said planet too is tech generated. Yudhanjaya Wijeratne lays out the details of it all in his foreword to the book, and I’m sure there are better people out there to talk about how all that contributes to making The Salvage Crew a great read. Me, I’m a non-techie. My grasp on science is largely high-school level, and maths barely even that. I can use a computer — but that’s about it.
So, why did I enjoy The Salvage Crew?
For one, I like the characters. Simon, Anna, Milo, and OC despite being from worlds and futures that are alien, are relatable. I understand them and their motivations. I care about them.
The plot, in the way it carries these characters, also kept me hooked. Urmagon Beta keeps throwing challenges at our characters, and I kept looking forward to see how they would adapt to each one.
The most important reason, for why I loved the book — language. I do love languages, and it was fascinating to see how the idea of language and communication fit into this book. I can’t risk saying more, because spoilers. In addition, the ‘voice’ of the OC — laden with sarcasm and irreverence, is something that I greatly enjoyed.
And the poetry! I knew there would be poetry — I wasn’t expecting it to be such a revelation. There is some truly moving poetry here, as also some verses that are tongue-in-cheek. There is a rather entertaining game of words being played here, and I’m all for it.
Which is why, I’ve attempted to write the rest of this review in verse. I daresay though, that it’s hardly a match for the poetry in The Salvage Crew. Here we go, nevertheless:
broken humans on a broken planet
and a voice in their head
like shards of glass.
survival should be simple
for those carrying the burden of their histories;
for those whose mortal homes
know hunger, thirst, love, and loss.
And yet, the siren songs are louder.
It is silence that is unlocked,
the truth that is salvaged.
The crew — pieces on the Go board,
that flicker and burn,
incandescent in the dusk of change.
we dance into the unknown
temporary companions to anxious yearnings.
it all becomes so much like sand
— the slipping away, the flowing
the seeking and the finding.
poetry is guide map, language the key,
the loudest secrets are the unspoken ones,
on other worlds, and our own.
So read, and break the ice,
that encloses frozen thoughts,
and go forth on adventures
that unleash the seas within.
TLDR: Just read The Salvage Crew, okay?
The story is narrated by an opinionated and sometimes snarky AI personality named Amber Rose who has a view on everything and everyone. She grows on you after a while...
And the poetry - what part does poetry play in civilization? You will have to read this to find out!
The beginning was a little slow, but then it's a salvage run to an uninhabited world - you don't want things to go wrong on page one, huh?
I loved the twist at the end
I feel this is definitely a book all sci fi fans should read. And I feel it would also appeal to a larger discerning audience who like a little philosophy with their tea.





