Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Lou Iovino
Author
Inheritance
Lou Iovino, author
Rare earth elements have been called ‘the seeds of technology.’ Their unique magnetic, phosphorescent, and catalytic properties make them irreplaceable in our 21st century world. And we ran out of them. Humanity, it seemed, was doomed to technological stagnation until a new industry emerged that provided hope. Astromining is a high-stakes venture that propels crews into uncharted territories of space where asteroids hold the key to our technological salvation. At the forefront of this extraterrestrial gold rush is Watts Astromining, an underdog team led by the enigmatic Thea Watts. With a mismatched crew of determined misfits and her father's antiquated ship, Watts Astromining must navigate not only the harsh vacuum of space but also the treacherous landscape of human ambition.
Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

A woman gets pulled into a dying industry plagued with corporate intrigue and disruption in this engaging SF thriller set in near-future space.

Thea Watts had spent the last three years taking care of her father, Scottie, slowly losing him to Alzheimer’s disease. Before he got sick, he had been an independent astrominer, so Thea rarely saw him while growing up. The Conglomerate and other national operations now dominate astromining, squeezing out the independent miners. Thea’s most significant inheritance is his ship, the Zephyr, used for traveling and mining rare earth minerals. Intent on selling it, Thea travels to Darkside Station on the moon. But a lowball offer from a Conglomerate buyer sends her on a different path. She cobbles together a five-person crew to run the ship, including Elliott, who becomes her lover. As if being a new, independent operator wasn’t struggle enough, Thea faces other massive obstacles. First, a couple of ships have been destroyed under mysterious circumstances in recent months. Second, the Conglomerate plans to force the Zephyr into its fold, and they make life miserable for Thea after she again rejects their offer. But when her ship comes under attack and tragedy strikes, Thea attempts to track the saboteur, whose identity is a surprise (to her). Iovino, whose previous work was Data
Mine (2022), does a marvelous job setting up his Rare Earth trilogy with this mesmerizing opener. The characterization is strong; Thea evolves from a bitter college dropout to a decisive leader, and the entire crew is well individualized and multidimensional. The author cleverly uses rare earth minerals as this world’s precious commodity. The vision of the astromining industry is sadly believable. The work’s biggest flaw is that the saboteur’s identity is relatively simple to guess, but this beginning successfully whets the reader’s appetite for the two books to follow.

A strong cast and a well-designed setting fuel this entertaining space opera.

ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...