Cat Rambo reviews THE GOODALL MUTINY by Gretchen Rix

Cat Rambo reviews THE GOODALL MUTINY by Gretchen Rix for the The Green Man Review. http://thegreenmanreview.com/

The Goodall Mutiny, by Gretchen Rix, takes a couple of chapters to find its legs and starts with a focus on horned rhinoceros beetles that leads the reader to think the beetles will prove a bigger plot point than they do (admittedly the idiosyncrasy of that detail may be delightful enough to counterbalance it), but emerges as a decent mystery read set aboard a failing space vessel. When Lieutenant Joan Chikage of the U.S.S. Goodall is attacked by her petty officer, she finds herself caught up in a mysterious and murderous mutiny that pits the remaining crew against each other. (Rix Café Texican, 2016)

WHAT I READ THIS WEEK (actually, the last couple of weeks): Where We Belong by Catherine Ryan Hyde. The Shimmer by David Morrell. Consequences by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Extremes by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. House of Purple Cedar by Tim Tingle.

You can find my books at https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix and all the other usual spots.

Almost to the brink of the cover reveal!

My newest novel is done. Sitting waiting for the proofreader to return from vacation. Once she’s vetted it, it’s off to be formatted. They have the cover already, and I honestly hope my book is worthy of its absolutely beautiful cover.

This will be the 14th book I’ve written from start to finish. Book number one won’t see the light of day (don’t ask). And I have three or four (or even more) half-written novels in drawers around here somewhere. I do plan on finishing one of them, but the others will probably just die. Probably. Which is why I recommend finishing what you start. Always finish what you start.

This evening I’m going back to a novel I put on hold more than a year ago. I thought it important to write book two and three in my space opera series. Step one is to re-read what I have. Hopefully, it’s good enough that I pick up where I ended and move on with it. We’ll see. If not, I’ll have to follow the advice I’m setting out below.

This book I just finished has been the hardest to write. And that’s because I redrafted it from beginning to end. Thought I had enough good in the original that I could copy and paste my edits, but ninety percent of it turned out to need new material. Hope I never try this again. My advice here is to get your characters in your head, familiarize yourself with the original plot, then throw the original away (somewhere you’ll never find it) and start from scratch. Page One.  

 

 

WHAT I HAVE READ IN THE LAST FEW WEEKS: Heaven Adjacent by Catherine Ryan Hyde, A Long Way Down by Nick Hornby, This Time Around by Tawna Fenste, Outsider by Stephen King, Everybody Dies by J. A. Konrath, The Warrior’s Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold.