The conscience of a star-snuffing space raider is sparked by a stowaway.
The moral quandary in this science-fiction tale for reluctant readers is sharply articulated and deeply felt, but neither the sketchy plot nor the far-fetched premise will invite much, if any, buy-in from readers. Plucked from a prison for orphans and trained by the heartless IRIS Corp to be a Raider and harvest the energy of entire suns, 17-year-old Destin’s fear of losing his job and being cast back is at war with his regret over what the theft does to each star’s planets. His dilemma reaches a tipping point when, following a brief visit to the surface of one such doomed but supposedly uninhabited planet, a white-haired, tan-skinned, golden-eyed girl named Calla comes out of hiding to demand that he turn his spacecraft around and return what he took. That deed accomplished, he blows up his ship and settles down to an idyllic future, exchanging hugs and kisses with his barefooted new companion. The decision to pitch the tale in accessible language doesn’t excuse the near absence of credible action or science. Most characters are not physically described.
Inner conflicts may be worth discussing, but the story is too thin to lift off.
(Science fiction. 12-18)