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Windswept: Windswept Book One (2015)

door Adam Rakunas

Reeksen: Windswept (1)

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1198229,253 (3.63)11
Nominated for the 2016 Philip K. Dick Award Labor organizer Padma Mehta is on the edge of space and the edge of burnout. All she wants is to buy out a little rum distillery and retire, but she's supposed to recruit 500 people to the Union before she can. She's only thirty-three short. So when a small-time con artist tells her about forty people ready to tumble down the space elevator to break free from her old bosses, she checks it out -- against her better judgment. It turns out, of course, it was all lies. As Padma should know by now, there are no easy shortcuts on her planet. And suddenly retirement seems farther away than ever: she's just stumbled into a secret corporate mission to stop a plant disease that could wipe out all the industrial sugarcane in Occupied Space. If she ever wants to have another drink of her favorite rum, she's going to have to fight her way through the city's warehouses, sewage plants, and up the elevator itself to stop this new plague. File Under: Science Fiction [ Plagues, Plots & Planets | One-Eyed Wonder | Bad Tips, Good Tipples | This Little Bar I Know ]… (meer)
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1-5 van 8 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
This is a fun and fast moving story that I just didn’t click with despite enjoying most of the elements. But I paused in the middle of reading it to loan it to my brother and he liked it so I think the problem was me. ( )
  ejmam | Feb 23, 2024 |
Windswept
(Windswept #1)
by Adam Rakunas
I picked up the narrated version that has over a dozen narrators performing the novel! It was excellent! I could have never imagined those voices in my head! This was top notch! I picked it up on Chirp on sale and boy was it worth it!
The story of Padmah trying to retire and keep her sanity in this insane world had me cheering her on! She was desperate and she went to crazy extremes to get people! She was hilarious!
The story is funny and witty, it has the most unusual characters, a mystery or two, plenty of twists, and the energetic drive of this woman! Loved everything about this book! I think I would have liked the book to read it but after hearing it with the multiple narrators, this is by far the best way to enjoy this book! I got it for a few buck on chirp! Watch for sales! Pick this up!!! I am going to be watching for book 2! ( )
  MontzaleeW | Jul 15, 2022 |
Three and a half stars. I found the first half of "Windswept" was too boring to hold my interest long enough for me to understand the worldbuilding (which was admittedly very good), so then I ended up semi-bored and semi-confused. Not a great combo.

However, I distinctly remember the last time I looked at the page count to see how much more I had to read-- 281. After that, things got EXCITING! I really enjoyed the last two hundred pages and I wish the whole book had maintained a pace closer to that.

The ending worked, too. Everything was tied up in kind of a ragged, maybe rum-stained, bow and I enjoyed it.

Overall: I'm conflicted about recommending this, because the first half was such a slog. I know it won't be for everyone, though. For what it's worth, I don't regret spending $8 for my trade paperback. ( )
  whatsmacksaid | Sep 21, 2018 |
This science fiction thriller was a true delight! It was fun, fast paced, and I adored the heroine.

Padma Mehta’s a crotchety union rep dreaming of retirement and her plans to buy a distillery. But for her dreams to come true, she needs to get thirty-three more people for her head count. Which means she needs to wait for thirty-three more people to fall from the sky.

Most of known space is controlled by three mega-corporations, who rely on the labor of indentured servants. But corporate life isn’t all its cracked up to be, and some indentures Breach – fleeing down the space elevator to the Union on Padma’s backwater, sugar cane producing planet.

When a small time con artist tells Padma that forty people are about to Breach, of course Padma checks it out. But in her desperate bid to make her headcount, Padma stumbles onto a plot that could endanger her entire planet.

Padma was far and away my favorite thing about Windswept. She’s just so self confident and audacious! I knew I utterly loved her when near the beginning of the book she’s pulling Breaches out of the ocean when some corporate ships start to go after their boat. Padma jumps overboard, uses her SF mind link thingie to take a photo of the corporate boats speeding away from her, and posts the photo on the net with a caption something like, “WalWa sees me drowning and does nothing! Hire lawyers and avenge me!” How can you not love a heroine like that? Plus, it’s rare to find an older heroine in science fiction. Padma was great on so many levels.

I also enjoyed the world Rakunas has created. I always like when speculative fiction novels actually consider how economics impact their setting, and Windswept was great for this. Padma’s planet is entirely reliant on the production of sugar cane, since industrial grade molasses is used as fuel for space ships. If the sugar cane crop fails, the economy fails with it, and the Union and all its workers would be at the mercy of the corporate overlords.

Windswept was just so much fun. The pacing’s good, and the action snaps along. I wouldn’t say it belongs to the subgenre of science fiction humor, but what humor it has is excellently used. Basically, it’s such a great debut. I can’t wait to read the sequel!

Originally posted on The Illustrated Page. ( )
  pwaites | May 1, 2017 |
With all the sf about corporations replacing governments, how come it’s taken this long to get sf starring a union organizer? (Further suggestions welcome.) Padma is a long-suffering, hard-negotiating steward on a planet whose sole export is fuel-grade cane, trying to scrape up enough money to buy her own refinery. For that, she needs to recruit forty more Breaches, people who leave the corporations for union work. Shenanigans ensue; it’s a good yarn, though the reader is likely ahead of Padma in figuring out the twists given that we know it’s a book and she doesn’t. ( )
  rivkat | Aug 3, 2016 |
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Informatie afkomstig uit de Engelse Algemene Kennis. Bewerk om naar jouw taal over te brengen.
All the world that's owned by idle drones is ours and ours alone.
We have laid the wide foundations; built it skyward stone by stone.
It is ours, not to slave in, but to master and to own.
While the union makes us strong.

Ralph Chaplin, "Solidarity Forever"
It only takes five fingers to form a fist.

Bill Bragg, "The Home Front"
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For Anne, my parents, my grandparents,
and everyone who has to punch a clock.
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Informatie afkomstig uit de Engelse Algemene Kennis. Bewerk om naar jouw taal over te brengen.
I was sitting at my usual stool at Big Lilly's, talking with Odd Dupree about his troubles down at the plant, when something big and stupid came crashing through the front door.
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Nominated for the 2016 Philip K. Dick Award Labor organizer Padma Mehta is on the edge of space and the edge of burnout. All she wants is to buy out a little rum distillery and retire, but she's supposed to recruit 500 people to the Union before she can. She's only thirty-three short. So when a small-time con artist tells her about forty people ready to tumble down the space elevator to break free from her old bosses, she checks it out -- against her better judgment. It turns out, of course, it was all lies. As Padma should know by now, there are no easy shortcuts on her planet. And suddenly retirement seems farther away than ever: she's just stumbled into a secret corporate mission to stop a plant disease that could wipe out all the industrial sugarcane in Occupied Space. If she ever wants to have another drink of her favorite rum, she's going to have to fight her way through the city's warehouses, sewage plants, and up the elevator itself to stop this new plague. File Under: Science Fiction [ Plagues, Plots & Planets | One-Eyed Wonder | Bad Tips, Good Tipples | This Little Bar I Know ]

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