11.10.2014 | Monday

One Wish Away

category: Book Reviews
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One Wish Awaytitle: One Wish Away
author: Kelley Lynn
published: 11 November 2014
publisher: Bloomsbury Spark
genre(s): romance, sci fi
pages: 250
source: NetGalley
format: eBook
buy/shelve it: Amazon | B&N | BookBub | StoryGraph | Goodreads

rating: four-stars

the blurb

Be careful what you wish for…

Lyra has always been ahead of the curve. Top of her class in school, a budding astronomer, and with a best friend like Darren she barely has time to miss the mother who abandoned her family years ago. She's too busy planning to follow in her father's footsteps, and to become the youngest astronomer at Space Exploration and Discovery.

When a star goes missing Lyra is determined to get to the bottom of it only to discover her braniac dad is the mastermind of a top-secret government experiment. They promise to build a perfect world, one galaxy at a time, but with every tweak of the present, a bit more of the future starts to crumble.

Lyra has to go undercover to reveal the truth and let humanity decide if the consequences are worth more than wishing on a star.


my review

I have very mixed feelings about this book.  I enjoyed it, but there were some parts that didn’t ring true for me and that colored the rest of the story for me.

What I absolutely loved was a female protagonist that was both crazy brilliant and flawed.  Lyra was more than a little socially awkward, but it wasn’t out of arrogance.  It was, as we learned, her response to feeling so very different from her peers.  Her best friend Darren is the perfect friend, supportive and kind and always on her side.

The premise of the story was definitely unique and completely unlike anything I have ever read.  In a nutshell, the central focus of the story is a highly technical, and very secret, piece of equipment with the potential to do great things.  Or to destroy humanity as we know it.  I love a book that makes you evalute your own perspectives and this definitely does that.  Is it worth any price to eliminate disease, to end wars?  On the surface, I think most of us would say yes.  But the book poses some interesting side effects to those ideals.  The potential for global economic crisis, the unforseen consequences to changes of reality.  There is a definite hint of the Butterfly Effect that makes you question morality and ethics and I found this fascinating.

My only true problem came with some of the circumstances leading into the main thrust of the book.  Our main character is a 16yo girl, the daughter of an astronomer and the niece of the director of a semi-secret space organization.  It is a research facility with a number of highly classified research projects, one of which Lyra stumbled upon.  And it was the circumstances that surrounded this that gave me issues.  It is true that my perspectives may be skewed by the fact that I am a former member of the intelligence community, but it was just too easy for Lyra to find herself in a position to learn more than she should.  It all started with a phone call she overheard at home, discussing classified aspects of her father’s project.  It is highly unlikely that any such conversation would ever take place outside of a secure facility.  Lyra was able to gain access to areas that would never be possible in reality, nor would she ever be read into a project as controversial as the one in this book.

Things to love…

  • Lyra.  Brilliant, flawed and brave… everything I want in a YA heroine.
  • Darren.  He is the perfect best friend/boyfriend, supportive and trusting.

Things I wanted more/less of…

  • More resolution with Lyra’s mother.
  • More believability.

If you like a good “thinking” book and some serious sci-fi, then this is a good read.  The author clearly knows her stuff when it comes to outer space and there was some fascination science going on!

About Kelley Lynn

Eventually the day came when the voices in Kelley Lynn’s head were more insistent then her engineering professor’s. So instead of turning to her Thermodynamics book, Kelley brought up a blank page on her computer screen and wrote. Somewhere along the way she became a Young Adult author.

Kelley was born and raised a Midwestern girl. She’s not afraid to sweat and fills her free time with softball, soccer and volleyball. (Though you probably don’t want her on your volleyball team.) She occasionally makes guest appearances as a female vocalist for area bands. Music plays a large role in her writing process as well as the characters and plot lines within her stories.

You can find Kelley hanging out at her blog, titled in her name, as well as the group blog she shares with her fellow critique partners, Falling for Fiction. Kelley is a member of the Society of Children’s Books Writers and Illustrators.

Rating Report
plot
three-stars
characters
four-stars
writing
four-stars
pacing
three-half-stars
Overall: three-half-stars

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