
Firefly: Aim to Misbehave
The Firefly Series, Book 9
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Narrated by:
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James Anderson Foster
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By:
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Rosiee Thor
About this listen
The ninth original novel tying into the critically acclaimed and much-missed Firefly series from creator Joss Whedon
It all started with the geese. The Firefly crew is eager to get paid for their latest job, but when payment arrives as a gaggle of geese instead of a purse, their stay on the planet Brome gets an indefinite extension. No matter that the geese will fetch a pretty penny once they get somewhere to sell them. Without coin, they can’t buy fuel, and without fuel, they can’t get offworld. Serenity is stuck.
Luckily the foreman of the local fuel refinery, Lyle Horne, wants to hire them, but not to work in the factory. He needs their help on a job only a crew like Serenity can pull off. Horne is an old friend of Shepherd Book’s. Mal would love to know more, but Lyle’s got bigger fish to fry. An authority known as The Governess has been kidnapping his workers. Lyle wants them back.
The crew need to break into her fortress of an estate and retrieve the workers. Jayne, who suffered a goose-related injury, stays behind to keep an eye on Horne while the rest of the crew split up to infiltrate the fortress. However, the Governess has her own story, as do the workers. Is Lyle lying? While they’re trying to make sense of it all, the workers’ children come aboard Serenity, with a plan to steal the ship and launch their own rescue mission.
©2024 Rosiee Thor (P)2024 Blackstone PublishingAn excellent addition to the Firefly verse
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Answers to questions
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Another stellar induction to the series
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Superbly written and fantastic narrative.
A brilliant storyline about friends and foes, and just a bit of luck at the right moment.
This would have been an awesome episode in the tv series.
exquisite, worth the wait and more
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A fun Serenity adventure
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It's a novel about the Firefly universe but the characters we all love are not really those same characters in this story.
Zoe is Mal's right hand on each and every mission. "I go on a mission, I'm taking Zoe, Wash. That's just how it is." Those were the words from Mal in the episode War Stories, to a Wash trying to assert that he didn't want Zoe in danger that time. Mal trusts Zoe's sixth sense and Zoe will always tell Mal what she thinks of a person. "I don't trust her, Captain", is a common line of Zoe's. In this story Zoe goes off to make lovey to her husband when Mal is meeting all the persons they have gathered together in the ship's dining area. Zoe is someone who parties when the job is done, not before.
When the plot enfolds, Mal sends Zoe off on another mission and takes Book on his own, more important mission. Mal only did that once, when Wash insisted and the mission was supposed to be easy. The War Stories episode, as I mentioned above. This might sound like a small omission from this particular story, but to those who know the Firefly universe, I think it's big. It suspends belief in the story when characters you know so well don't act as they should.
Zoe then gets taken by surprise by a rich and wealthy woman. Zoe? The warrior woman that even Jayne won't tangle with? Another suspension of that belief.
Throughout, Mal keeps talking about he owes the main villain one. Owes him because he was double crossed. He wasn't. There's a big spoiler I won't go into here, but the reason Mal is so keen on revenge against the bad guy never worked for me. The second villain was even weaker.
Inara, an expert reader of people, and always calm under pressure, gets flustered and lets her opinions get the better of her in a meeting. Another suspension of that belief.
These are just a few misunderstandings of the characters of Serenity's crew that kept shouting at me as I read Aim To Misbehave.
There are more holes in the plot of Aim To Misbehave than there are holes in Swiss cheese. If the author can use old and worn sayings throughout then so can I.
I had the impression the author had watched Firefly and decided to take every moment of every one of a well rounded variety of character traits, all fitting like jigsaw pieces in the series, and cram them into Aim To Misbehave, whether they fit or not. The tendency to do deep into interactions between characters so often was painful by the end of a book I struggled to get to the end of.
I've enjoyed the books in this series, but Aim To Misbehave, to use a quote I saw in another review, is like fan fiction at full price. Not all of it was terrible. It wasn't written overly badly. I just never felt like the author knew the characters she was writing about. She didn't understand those guys we read these novels about because we love their faults, their bravado, their escapades. Maybe it's not the author's fault but the fact that they chose her to write the story. Not that the story was really that great. it never felt believable and it was incredibly similar to the last book. Mal ain't a trade unionist, but he has seemed to be portrayed as one in some of these books.
If there is a book ten then it needs to be so much better than Aim To Misbehave. Tell us about YoSaffBridge. Just get a proof reader and editor or give the series back to the writer of the earlier books. James Lovegrove, was it, write some excellent books. I loved how they looked back at member's of the crew's past with with interesting stories. Aim To Misbehave really had none of that.
And the Geese? They were ridiculous and very boring by the end of the book.
I hate to be this damning, because it's someone's hard work. The author will have put their heart and soul into this book. I bet someone gave her the story though.
The way the villains were dealt with was very poor. To be honest, I never found either very villainous anyway. But, again, that wasn't the way these characters we so adore would have done it. Suspended that belief this was Serenity's crew again. That happened time after time after time. Just get the crew right if you're going to write a fully published Firefly novel.
The voice performance, from James Anderson Foster, was as good as always. James has really managed to catch the tone of Mal and Jayne.
Those Bloody Geese
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Could do better
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