
Member Reviews

Moderately amusing space opera. We have an upper class twit who who enrolls in the navy, primarily as a decoy so that his minder can get things done, but somehow he always ends up in the thick of the action.

(I received a free copy of this book from Net Galley in exchange for an honest review.)
Lieutenant Lord Thomas Kinago sets out from the Imperium homeworld for the Autocracy of the Uctu, a galactic region with a geckolike overlord known, eponymously, as the Autocrat. Thomas is ostensibly on a pleasure cruise with his cousin Jil to enjoy the pleasures of the Gecko culture. (Jil is herself fleeing a spot of trouble in the Central Worlds after she rebuffed the unwanted amorous interest of a local crime boss)
In fact, Thomas is on a mission for the mysterious Mr. Frank, the head of the secret service, to discover how prohibited goods, including a small fighter ship, are being smuggled into the Autocracy. His crew’s overt assignment is to find out why legitimate shippers are being detained at checkpoints, sometimes for months, without explanation. As usual, Thomas’s reputation for sudden enthusiasm and goodhearted mayhem precede him. It is all his trusted aid Parsons can do to keep his leader on course.
Thomas’s newest interest is superstitions, and he is driving everyone to distraction by telling fortunes, and even inventing a new method or two. Yet while the Autocrat, a new and fairly young Uctu female, finds Thomas a curious diplomat, she also rather likes him—much to Parsons’s relief. It seems Thomas needs free passage within the Uctu home system before he can investigate the illegal contraband trade. What’s more, the smuggling ring is quite determined to cancel Thomas’s visit before he can cancel them. As usual, it’s up to Parsons to find a way to lead his hapless master to victory—or at least keep him from getting himself killed by a very determined enemy.
This is the sequel to A View from the Imperium.
This was a moderately amusing space opera novel, featuring the "Jeeves and Wooster" plot of a classless twit who signs up for the navy and spends more time getting in the way of his "minder's" plans.
Was it fun? Yeah, absolutely. I enjoyed the novelty of the story (although, by the time the end came, it was getting a little irritating.) Was it a good story? It was okay - I don't think I would hurry and read any more of this series (although the author does have some brilliant novels. Check her out!)
Paul
ARH