Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽'s Reviews > Aurora Rising

Aurora Rising by Amie Kaufman
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really liked it
bookshelves: arc, netgalley, science-fiction, space-opera, ya-science-fiction

$1.99 Kindle sale for this first book in a new YA SF series, May 14, 2020. The focus is on adventure + snark. The second book (which I'm currently reading) just went on sale this month.

3.66 stars. Review first posted on Fantasy Literature:

A lot of YA fantasy and science fiction works follow teenager characters as they attend magic or spaceflight school (I would take either!), but not nearly as many follow the characters’ lives after graduation. Aurora Rising, a new YA space adventure from Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff, the authors of the well-regarded ILLUMINAE FILES trilogy, take the latter approach, following a diverse cast of older teens as they graduate from Aurora Academy in the year 2380, are divided into crews of six according to their specialties, and assigned their initial mission for the Aurora Legion.

Tyler Jones, age 18, is at the top of the senior class. A natural leader and stellar student, he’s earned the right to four of the top five picks in the next day’s Draft, where the “Alphas” or team leaders pick the five graduating students, each with a different specialty, who will be their crew. But Tyler can’t sleep the night before the Draft, so he takes off on a solo space flight into the Fold, the weird interdimensional part of space that allows interstellar space travel. Tyler’s about to head back to Aurora when he receives an SOS call from a legendary space ship, the Hadfield, which was lost over 200 years ago.

Tyler (barely) manages to rescue the single survivor of the Hadfield, a cryogenically frozen girl named Aurora Jie-Lin O’Malley. (Luckily she goes by Auri, sparing us from an overdose of Auroras.) But rescuing Auri takes too long and Tyler misses the all-important Draft. So his new crew is the rejects and misfits of the graduating class … except not all. Tyler’s twin sister Scarlett (a diplomat) and their lifelong friend Cat (an ace pilot), who were able to hold out from being drafted by other Alphas so they could be on Tyler’s crew, excel at their specialties. Joining them are Zila, a dark brown-skinned sociopathic scientist; Finian, their resentful alien tech who wears an exosuit to compensate for his physical disabilities; and Kal, their alien combat specialist who has a genetic predisposition to violent anger.

Tyler’s crew, Squad 312, takes off on their first mission, but their routine supply run quickly turns odd when they discover Auri stowed away on their Longbow spaceship, and then dangerous as the mission goes south and deadly forces close in. Soon Squad 312 is on the run from their enemies while trying to solve an ancient mystery that may have galactic consequences.

Aurora Rising is a fast-paced space opera adventure, overflowing with thrills and chills, and spiced up with romantic tensions between the various crew members and lots of snarky dialogue.
“But I do know you and I swore an oath when we joined the Legion. To help the helpless. To defend the defenseless. And even though the ―”

“Um, sir?” Finian de Seel says. “We might have a problem.”

“You mean aside from you interrupting my speech?” Tyler Jones asks. “Because I’d been practicing it in my head for an hour and it was gonna be great.”
There are fun if slightly juvenile details that help make the story more memorable for readers, like the color coding for the various specialties at Aurora Academy, the decorative and informative sidebars that bolster the worldbuilding, and the sarcastic voice of Auri’s “uniglass” (a handheld computer device):
“I’m top-of-the-line, new-gen uniglass technology, available nowhere outside the academy,” it shoots back. “I’m seventeen times smarter than him. And three times better-looking.”
Tyler’s crew is divided equally between men and women and includes some sexual diversity (one of the crew is bisexual) as well as racial diversity … not to mention a couple of aliens. The constant shift in point of view with each chapter can get a little dizzying; all seven of the crew members (including stowaway Auri) have multiple chapters from their POVs. Some of the characters are more memorable than others, but a few weeks after reading this I still clearly remember most of the crew members, a tribute to Kaufman and Kristoff’s success in creating distinct characters.

It’s convenient that the half of Tyler’s crew who were considered “the dregs” of their class doesn’t actually include anyone stupid or incompetent. They’re social outcasts with significant personality issues (which has the side benefit of adding interest to the story), but they’re all bright and talented at their specialties. Also suspiciously convenient is the fact that spaceship crews need to be under age 25 to withstand the mental pressures of entering the Fold, but at least there’s a plausible reason given for these youthful crews.

The basic plot elements of Aurora Rising ― a mismatched company of strangers trying to overcome their differences and become unified, an improbable heist (complete with a MacGuffin), and a journey to a destination that turns out to be far more perilous than expected ― will be familiar to anyone who reads a lot of sci-fi, but Kaufman and Kristoff sucked me right in and I couldn’t put this book down. Aurora Rising is a fun, quick read if you like your YA SF with lots of snarky banter. It’s almost guaranteed to appeal older teenagers who enjoy science fiction. It’s the first book in the new AURORA CYCLE series (thankfully its ending doesn’t leave you with TOO much of a cliffhanger). I’m definitely on board for the next book!

I received a free review copy from the publisher and NetGalley. Thanks!
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Reading Progress

April 4, 2019 – Started Reading
April 4, 2019 – Shelved
April 4, 2019 – Shelved as: arc
April 4, 2019 – Shelved as: netgalley
April 4, 2019 – Shelved as: science-fiction
April 4, 2019 – Shelved as: space-opera
April 4, 2019 – Shelved as: ya-science-fiction
April 4, 2019 –
41.0% "“We need three things,” Tyler says, breaking the uncomfortable silence.
Fin looks up from his home repair job, answers without missing a beat. “I’ll take a fresh pair of pants, a professional masseuse, and a shot of Larassian semptar.”
Tyler presses on as if his mechanic didn’t speak. “Shelter, intel, and a change of clothes. So Fin got one out of three right.”"
April 5, 2019 –
66.0% "It’s about the scariest thing I’ve laid eyes on, and again, I’ve seen Dariel in his undies. It looks like the Maker took every monster from under every bed of every child ever born and squished them into one great big über-monster—and then made a creature that’d eat that monster on toast with a glass of OJ and the morning news."
April 6, 2019 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-18 of 18 (18 new)

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Emily This book sounds amazing. I hope you like it!


Tandie I’m so glad it’s good! You’ve got me worried about the cliffhanger.


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Tandie wrote: "I’m so glad it’s good! You’ve got me worried about the cliffhanger."

Eh, it's typical for a series early book ending. The immediate crisis is resolved but the overall problem still looks over their heads.


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ It's a good YA read! Lots of excitement.


megs_bookrack Great review! I am really looking forward to getting to this one!


Kat valentine ( Katsbookcornerreads) Excellent review!!😉💖


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Thanks so much, megs and Kat!


message 8: by Jaidee (new)

Jaidee Love the review but I'm running away Tadiana ;)


message 9: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth Terrific review! It’s been a looong minute since I read a YA sci-fi novel, so this one is a possibility!


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Jaidee wrote: "Love the review but I'm running away Tadiana ;)"

:P ... lol, okay, I wouldn’t recommend this one to you if you don’t like SF. But have you tried All Systems Red and the Murderbot series? You need to read at least the first two, but they’re novellas so they’re quick reads. I think you might really like them! Or here’s an online SF short story for you to give a try: Sinew and Steel and What They Told.


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Elizabeth wrote: "Terrific review! It’s been a looong minute since I read a YA sci-fi novel, so this one is a possibility!"

I’d also recommend Brandon Sanderson’s Skyward, kind of a Star Wars flavor of YA SF.


message 12: by Nataliya (new)

Nataliya Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "Terrific review! It’s been a looong minute since I read a YA sci-fi novel, so this one is a possibility!"

I’d also recommend Brandon Sanderson’s Skyward, kind of ..."


I’m in the mood for YA SF apparently. Between this one and ‘Skyward’, which one would you recommend?


message 13: by Jaidee (new)

Jaidee Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Jaidee wrote: "Love the review but I'm running away Tadiana ;)"

:P ... lol, okay, I wouldn’t recommend this one to you if you don’t like SF. But have you tried All Systems Red and ..."


Ty Tadiana....I will add the Murderbot one to my shortlist...thanks for keeping trying :)


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Jaidee, I'll be crossing my fingers!

Nataliya, I think I'd give Skyward the nod. The first book felt a bit derivative but had a great finish, and I really liked the sequel.


message 15: by Nataliya (new)

Nataliya Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Jaidee, I'll be crossing my fingers!

Nataliya, I think I'd give Skyward the nod. The first book felt a bit derivative but had a great finish, and I really liked the sequel."


Excellent! Thanks, Tadiana!


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Also, I liked another YA SF novel by these two authors even better: Illuminae, which I read a few years ago. But I’m definitely a tougher critic now than I was then, so take that recommendation with a bit of a grain of salt. :) (There are also two more books in the Illuminae series, but I never got around to reading them. I thought the first book worked fine as a stand-alone read, though.)


message 17: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Also, I liked another YA SF novel by these two authors even better: Illuminae, which I read a few years ago. But I’m definitely a tougher critic now than I was then, so take that re..."

I wasn't as much of a fan of Illuminae, now that you mention it, but maybe because my appreciation of the actual plot/characters couldn't match up to my total obsession with how pretty it was (visually).

I loved all of Sanderson's Stormlight Archive so far but I never started any of his other works. I think I'll follow Nataliya's lead and jump into Skyward then! :)) Thanks for bringing that one up!


Jackie just loved this and can't wait to read the second in the series


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