Member Reviews
When life gets crazy and you need to escape a fun sci-fi story is exactly what you need. So excited to finally read another sci-fi Beth Revis book that I was immediately disappointed when I realized it was a novella….but then happy again there will be 3 novellas. Ada is out scavenging ghost ships and is accidentally stuck and helpless but luckily a government ship is nearby and she charms her way on it. On the ship Halifax - we meet Rian. His crew is searching for something and Ada is there to help or cause problems or at the very least flirt. Lots of background on earth and political landscape packed into this novella. Though it’s short it has great banter and a cliffhanger that makes you want the next one.
Full Speed to a Crash Landing is the first in an adult novella trilogy, described as a sexy space heist. Ada Lamarr gets in a space wreck and is rescued by a government salvage crew run by Rian White. Ada joins in on their classified mission.
It's written by Beth Revis, known for YA series Across the Universe. I had read and enjoyed her YA series when they first came out over a decade ago. Unfortunately, despite being classified as adult, Full Speed to a Crash Landing still read well and truly like YA.
I found the main character to be quite immature and rude at first. However, she did become more likeable as the story went on. Unfortunately, the male love interest had no personality. Despite the novella being described as sexy, there was no sex, only instalove.
In some parts, the politics were entirely skipped over. Though I understand it's hard to include worldbuilding in a novella, it felt lazy. In other parts, characters, seemingly out of nowhere, cared a lot about politics. The ending fell entirely flat for me and made the whole story seem a bit redundant.
The main redeeming qualities were that it was fast-paced. Despite my annoyances here and there, I couldn't stop turning the pages. I would recommend this to anyone looking a quick, fun, non-serious and easy read set in space.
Thank you to Hachette Australia for providing an eARC for review via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
My librarian instinct on this title would be to catalog it in our YA section. I appreciate that the romance is low involvement. I was neutral on the story until the very end. The end got wild and interesting then ended. That I did not like. I suspect that this a planned series by the author but the book is short enough that it could have continued to a more satisfying resolution.
Kudos on the revelation at the end.
Ada's focus on food was the best part for me. That levity was awesome....and true for most of us.
A note about the read aloud option. My hatred for the voices is high level. I tried them all. They are awful and distract from the story. I have to say that I will probably reread this story to myself because the computer generated voices are a distraction at best.
I adore beth revis, especially her science fiction. This is another great entry with terrific world building and a fast paced plot with sympathetic characters. But it feels incomplete. I need another book!
This is the first novella in a series of three that are described as a sexy space heist with tons of action.
Ada salvages spaceship wrecks and should have first dibs but she’s found herself with a home in the side of her spaceship. She’s losing air fast and help is on the way! The help is a government crew that is out on a classified mission and having an extra person on board isn’t ideal. She’s enjoying the finer things that government salvage crews get to eat and Rian, the man in charge, is watching her closely sensing something is suspicious. He just can’t put his finger on it!
I thought this was such a fun read! I haven’t read many space stories and this was refreshing and had my full interest. The writing was engaging and the setting immersive. I wasn’t getting the “sexy” vibes that this story is promoted with at all. I was actually surprised to see that word used so much after I finished the book and went to peek at other reviews. It was still a fun time and I want to know more about the world and about Ada in the next book!
Thank you so much to Netgalley, Beth Revis, and DAW for providing this free ARC. This is my honest review! This will publish on August 6th!
I have posted my review on Goodreads, my Facebook book club, and will make a TikTok to post before the pub date!
I was expecting something more I think. The main character was way too quirky for my taste, even when it was highly not needed at the moment. The romance was bland and the characters had zero chemistry. The premise seemed like high stakes but that is not the vibe you get as you keep reading.
4/5 ⭐️
This was such a fun and fast-paced sci-fi novella. I loved how cunning and clever Ada was and her interactions with the other crew members had some great banter. The mystery of the wreck was intriguing and kept me interested to read what would happen next. It ends on a cliff hanger, so I can't wait to read the next book!
Thank you to NetGalley, Beth Revis, and DAW for my early access to this.
This was a fun read! Full Speed to a Crash Landing by Beth Revis is the first in a novella trilogy about a scavenger who finds herself stranded on a remote planet and the government agent who steps in to save her. Ada Lamarr is running out of air and options when a ship with a skeptical crew finally answers her distress call. Now aboard the Roundabout, Ada needs to gain the trust of the crew in order to complete her mission and theirs.
I thoroughly enjoyed every aspect of this story. The majority of the story is narrated from Ada’s point of view. She is self-depricating, bold, confident, and sarcastic in all the best ways. As the reader, we are never fully given access to Ada’s goals and learn what she is thinking as she is thinking it. She can be an unreliable narrator, however that makes the story even more fun. Her attempts to win the crew over are met with reluctant approval and downright hostile glares, but she keeps on. She knows they need her to retrieve what they are looking for whether they trust her or not.
Rian White is the science officer slash know-it-all on the ship. He also happens to be the government official in charge. Ada takes a liking to him immediately. He’s kind, cunning, and about four steps behind our heroine. He enlists her help on their mission, but it is a battle of wits to see who will come out on top.
Overall, I loved Full Speed to a Crash Landing and was sad when it was over. I could have easily read another hundred or more pages of Ada’s antics. If you are a fan of sci-fi, love good banter, or you are looking for a new read, I highly recommend it.
I think the world building was good and left me interested in it. I really liked the crew on the Halifax, their stories seemed very interesting. Unfortunately, I wasn't a big fan of the main character and wasn't very into the plot itself. However, I may give the next book a chance in hopes that we get more backstory and development.
Loved the Banter! I wish this wasn’t a novella, and there was more context to why the MC was doing what she was doing. I really liked the technical documentation at the end, that would have been fun sprinkled throughout. I found myself wanting more.
Beth Revis dialed it up for Full Speed To A Crash Landing!
What a great introduction to this series as we meet feisty and slippery Female Main Character, Ada Lamarr. Despite being stranded due to a hole in her ship, she has a space suit with a Jaxon Jet. A JAXON JET! And she has a mouth on her. I giggled out loud and said oh boy, Beth Revis dropped the F-bomb in a book! (OH my!)
"Some men have the attitude that there are no bras in space. Which is bullshit." ~ Ada Lamarr
Ada is indeed a slippery Charater and a very unreliable narrator. Or is she? She captivates her rescuers or at least some of them - especially Rian White who can't tell whether he should trust her or not. (Or kiss her.) Ada lures him in (and other crew) with her forwardness and confidence and tells them enough of the truth that they trust her. And her Jaxon Jets. Her ability to risk her life to a job done seals the deal. She and Rian play quite the game of cat and mouse but who is the cat and who is the mouse is often up for grabs
I could not put this book down. Read this novella if you love:
>Space Heists
>Feisty FMC
>Worldbuilding
>Plot Twists
>A MMC who hates being double crossed
>Banter
>Excellent supporting cast
>Lentils
>Epistolic Writing at the end
This is the first book in a Trilogy so there is more to come and I am here for it. Here for but waiting impatiently.
Thank you to NetGalley and DAW for a gifted copy of this book in return for an honest review.
"No one ever said space was safe, and then humans go in and make it even less so."
★★★★☆
I never lay my hand on sci-fi before so Full Speed to a Crash Landing is my first ever. To be honest i'm kinda scared i would understand nothing with the future tech or invention related stuff, but i found this one pretty much easy to proceed! The story went smoothly from the moment Ada made an urgent call to Halifax and so on, but i knew there's something more behind it. There are some clue tossed around and puzzle piece that doesn't fit to the story and these are the things make me keep reading, and the twist in the end totally made it worth it!
I love the characters, i love the Halifax crew plus Ada interactions thought they would be some kind of found family but who knows, moreover i love the Ada-Rian dynamic and tension. Ada is the chaotic one while Rian is there to listen and respond whatever she said in a very calm and smooth way (mentioned a lot but i'm not complaining, we all simp for him anyway), somewhat matching her freak.
I'm itching to read the sequel because the cliffhanger got me so worked up and excited for more. Thank you Netgalley and Beth Ravis for the eARC in exchange for an honest review!
As a big sci-fi fan, I was very excited about this novella.
The world-building was very intriguing and definitely made me want to know more. We only got small glimpses of this imagined future, where humanity is travelling the stars (and leaving all their rubbish behind of course).
One of my favourite parts of the book were the log entries and pieces of correspondence at the end of the book. They revealed a lot about the characters and the world that had been unclear up to that point. I wish these logs had been included in the rest of the book as that would have fit the plot really well.
Unfortunately, I was not a big fan of the main character. I warmed up to her by the end but most of the time I found her too obnoxious, defiant and quirky almost to the point where it felt a little forced.
I definitely will be reading the sequel though. There is still much of the story that has not been told yet.
Full Speed to a Crash Landing is a delightful slice of fun for your reading pile. It is a genre combination I love — romantic comedy + science fiction + action thriller — and Beth Revis’ execution is taut.
What do I mean by ‘taut’? There is not one ounce of fat to be found in this novella. Revis’ characterisation is efficient but extremely effective, and the plotting is clever without complication. So rather than character or plot driven, I would actually say Full Speed to a Crash Landing is ‘banter driven’ fiction. The dialogue between gutsy Ada and the government salvage crew members is far more than entertaining icing. That dialogue, coupled with Ada’s precise and disciplined inner thinking are this novella’s propulsion.
Striking also is how Revis delivers a mystery thriller with light-hearted rom-com moments alongside both gripping life-or-death events and poignant self-reflection.
My only real disappointment was that this pageturner’s 192 pages flew by faster than light-speed, and so I was left wanting more of Ada and Rian. That said, having reached Full Speed to a Crash Landing’s conclusion (do not forget to read the emails at the end, and their footnotes!), I do agree that in this rare story context it makes complete sense for this pair’s intense and highly eventful interactions to be spaced out across a novella trilogy. Ada is definitely the type of character that leaves people scratching their heads in her wake!
Fortunately though, we do not have long to wait for round two between this duo as Chaotic Orbits #2, How to Steal a Galaxy is scheduled for release in December 2024. I’m all in on this series.
Dear Beth Revis,
Full Speed to a Crash Landing is the first in a series of three novellas. Ada Lamarr is a space scavenger – looting ghost ships and crashed ships for anything valuable enough to sell. But maybe there’s more to her than that? We’ll have to see.
As the story begins, Ada is running out of air. Her ship, Glory, has a hole in the hull. She’s sent out a distress signal to a nearby ship, the Halifax, explaining she has no life support or electrics and is on the last available air in her spacesuit. Both Glory and Halifax are in the region because of the crashed ship, the Roundabout, on a nearby planet. The Halifax is suspicious but they cannot ignore a distress signal so eventually (and just in time) they rescue Ada.
In this world there are four “earths”; Sol-Earth (the original, a planet which is largely dead or dying, full of pollution and with small pockets of tourism), Centauri-Earth, Gliese-Earth and Reigel-Earth. One intergalactic government is in charge of all four planets. Largely, the other three planets (if I understood things correctly) provide food and consumer goods to Sol-Earth as there’s not much more than tourism left.
It’s clear that the people on board the Halifax are trying to find something super-secret in the wreckage of the Roundabout. Ada tells them she came across the crash site and did her thing, having found some metal in the cargo hold which she can sell for scrap. It’s very apparent there’s more going on, but exactly what takes the entire novella to be revealed.
On the Halifax, we are introduced to Captain Io, First, Magnusson and Saraswati – the crew and Rian White. Rian is obviously in charge of the mission itself – he’s some kind of unspecified governmental operative-type.
Ada is quick-witted and sassy, provocative and brash. She crash lands into the Halifax’s personnel in many ways and it takes a while before they know exactly what to do with her.
“Hey, I don’t want to get people in trouble.” I hold both my hands up in a show of peace. “If Saraswati can’t talk, let me.”
“You certainly love to do that,” Magnusson grumbles.
I ignore him because I’m the bigger person.
The problem with the mission to retrieve whatever the thing or things is from the crash site, is that the planet is very newly formed – it is basically lava with a thin crust over the top of it. There’s a lot of geothermal activity and chances are all or part of the Roundabout will be sinking into the lava soonish. Unlike Magnusson or Saraswati, Ada has a special jetpack which can withstand extreme heat and means she’s a chance to retrieve a box teetering on the edge of a lava river. The crew don’t quite trust her but she is also their best hope for success.
And there’s the rub. See, before, when the only thing spurring them to action was my distress signal and their paranoia thinking I was laying a trap rather than dying, they thought the biggest threat to retrieving the box’s contents would be someone like me.
What’s in the box? Why is it important? Who wants it? What is Ada really doing? Most of those questions are eventually answered but there are some that are tantalisingly out of reach and for answering in the next or the last of the trilogy. There is clearly a broader story arc but this novella does have its own and I wouldn’t say it ends on a cliffhanger. Not really. There is a romance developing between Rian and Ada – their chemistry builds over the course of this novella but it’s too soon for a HEA.
The dynamic between Rian and Ada is fun to read. They play a kind of cat and mouse game, each testing the other, trying not to give too much away but at the same time, a mutual respect grows in addition to their chemistry.
Initially, I did have a bit of a disconnect with the first description of Rian in the book:
On the captain’s other side is a man with unkempt hair. Average size, average build. Totally forgettable. Except for the sharpest, clearest hazel eyes I’ve ever seen.
and the way he was described afterwards – sexy, hot – not at all forgettable. (In fact, I first thought Ada’s love interest would be the big muscly specimen initially standing behind the Captain but that turned out to be not the case at all. I’m something of a romance-gosling, looking to imprint on the first hero-looking goose I see.) In hindsight, I think the attraction from Ada to Rian was significantly influenced by his brain. She finds him physically attractive but that’s not the first thing she notices about him and, the more he intrigues and entertains her mind, the more handsome and sexy he becomes to her. (Makes sense.)
I have a feeling that a re-read of Full Speed to a Crash Landing would be worthwhile to pick up on the clues along the way and/or to really understand some of Ada’s more cryptic comments. There’s a whole layer to the story the reader can’t know before they get to the end of it.
Apart from Rian’s mission reports at the end, the story is told from Ada’s perspective. Those mission reports were interesting reading and gave me a lot of insight into the broader picture, a sneak peek of what is to come and more information about Rian’s thoughts.
While the novella does tell a story with a beginning, middle and end, the complete trilogy is likely to influence my overall thinking about this book. For now it’s a high B but, if the series develops as it promises to and sticks the landing, then I foresee bumping the grade up.
Grade: B
Regards,
Kaetrin
PS: Readers should note that after the acknowledgements (at least, in my arc that’s where they were) are the mission report footnotes – these are important: don’t skip them!
I discovered Beth Revis shortly after starting Girl Who Reads when I reviewed her young adult science fiction novel Across the Universe. I loved the entire series but then I started moving away from young adult fiction and didn't keep up with her writing career. But when I saw she had a new story and it was for adults I knew I had to give it a chance.
Full Speed to Crash Landing is a novella that is possibly set in the same universe as Across the Universe but you don't have to have read that series as there are no real connections.
As it is a novella, there isn't a ton of worldbuilding but enough to understand the world Ada lives in. There is more time spent on developing the characters and they are great characters. I don't think I could name a favorite. For a story that is under 200 pages, there is a lot going on. It's not all action, though there is quite a bit of that. It is more mental - trying to figure out everyone's motives and who they really are.
I wanted to just sit and devour this book - but life got in the way. It could easily be read in an afternoon or evening and what a delightful way to spend a few hours. But I'm also glad that I didn't just race through it as I felt a little bummed when I finished it because the adventure was over.
My first thought after finishing it was "I hope this is a start of a new series". So I was super excited when I pulled up the Goodreads' listing and saw in the description that this kicks off a trilogy entitled Chaotic Orbits. The next novella, How to Steal a Galaxy, is due to hit shelves in December (I've already requested my review copy!). I'm not sure 3 books are going to be enough though.
If you are looking for a quick, but highly entertaining read this weekend then this is the book you want to read.
My review will be published at Girl Who Reads on Saturday - https://www.girl-who-reads.com/2024/08/the-perfect-afternoon-read-for-sci-fi.html
Yay, a space adventure novella series, we love to see it! Especially when it has all the stuff this one has: It's fun, witty, full of twists and adventure and fabulous characters... need I go on? I mean probably, otherwise this review will be one sentence, but. Novella reviews have to be shortish, right? Lest I give something away. Ugh fine I'll do more. This book hooked me from the epigraph, which is saying something. I thought about telling you what it said so you could chuckle and realize you need the book, but don't you realize that already anyway? Buy it yourself, see the epigraph that had me cackling from the start!
Yeah so it is very high stakes and features all kinds of stuff I did not see coming. So it's the perfect blend, you see. Action, excitement, laughs, swoons, feels... and in such a tiny, unputdownable, quick-read package. And the best news? The sequel is out in December. Which means no waiting years on end to see what happens next for Ada and company!
Bottom Line: If I haven't convinced you by now, that's kind of on you.
I really enjoyed this novella! It packed a lot into a short amount of pages, including a heist, near-death experiences, and maybe a budding romance. Ada is a lot of fun to follow, she's a smooth talker and several steps ahead of everyone else and I want to know more about her mysterious employer.
I'll be waiting for the next installment!
I voluntarily read and reviewed this book. All opinions are my own. Thank you to DAW and NetGalley for the copy.
Wow, where has Beth Revis been all my reading life? Full Speed to a Crash Landing is my first book by her, and I am completely blown away. It feels like this book was tailor-made for me!
From the very beginning, I was hooked as Ada’s disastrous day unfolds. With her ship in tatters and a skeptical crew that doesn’t believe she needs help, Ada’s plight is both thrilling and relatable. As she navigates the chaos of a secretive salvage mission, the tension is palpable. This high-energy space adventure brims with sharp-witted dialogue, clever twists, and a touch of romance that balances perfectly. I thoroughly enjoyed every page and am already craving more.
Scream it from the rooftops, folks—I devoured this gem in one sitting during my silent book club meeting! There’s nothing quite like a short, thrilling read to reignite your love for a genre, and this book did just that.
Ada, whose name I love and which pays homage to two remarkable women according to the acknowledgments, is a truly captivating character. Watching her skillfully maneuver through her interactions with the Halifax crew, particularly Rian, was a real treat. Their interactions were full of witty exchanges and a tantalizing build-up. The extra touches, like the reports and notes included at the end, added a unique and enjoyable layer to the story.
I usually skim acknowledgments, but I read every word in this one and laughed out loud at Beth Revis’s account of how this book came to be. It’s a must-read, so don’t miss it!
A huge thank you to @rrbooktours, Penguin Random House, and Beth Revis for this incredible ARC. Please, please, please include me on the tour for the next book in this series! 😍😂
I wholeheartedly recommend Full Speed to a Crash Landing and am eager to dive into more of Beth Revis’s work. This one is an easy 5 stars for me!
Book: Full Speed To A Crash Landing
Author: Beth Revis
Publisher: DAW
Publication Date: August 6th, 2024
"The choice is fake. It’s not real. Every action we take, every action we take, ultimately, we never choose to be brave or not. We just choose to survive."
Thoughts:
This novella was such a fun, fast-paced read full of action, planetary exploration, and budding romance. I loved the dry sarcastic humour Ada has in this story; I enjoyed all the laugh-out-loud moments.
The pacing was perfect with tons of twists and turns all the way until the last page of the book. I am really excited to see how this adventure continues in the next novella, and hopefully more of the budding romance. Their banter and Ada's flirtatious moments were both sweet and funny.
Thank you so much to Beth, DAW, and NetGalley, for the ARC copy of Full Speed To A Crash Landing. I am voluntarily leaving an honest review.