Molly Fyde and the Land of Light Audiobook By Hugh Howey cover art

Molly Fyde and the Land of Light

Molly Fyde, Book 2

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Molly Fyde and the Land of Light

By: Hugh Howey
Narrated by: Jennifer O'Donnell
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About this listen

What began for Molly as a simple journey to retrieve her father’s old spaceship has turned into an epic adventure with far-reaching consequences. For years, she dreamed of reconnecting with her past. Now she’s going to meet it in a way she never expected: head-on.

Her father is alive. Her mother’s memories are trapped inside his old ship. She’s on the run from her very own Navy, and now has been tasked with the impossible: Rescue her parents. Save the galaxy. End a war.

Before she can begin, however, Molly must first help a friend in need. One of her crew members is in trouble, a life hanging by a slender thread. There’s only one place to turn: the home world of Humanity’s sworn enemy, the very race Molly and Cole have been trained to meet in battle and have been conditioned to fear and loathe: Planet Drenard, the next stop for the starship Parsona.

©2009 Hugh Howey (P)2013 Hugh Howey
Fiction Science Fiction Space Opera Space Adventure Interstellar Solar System
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What listeners say about Molly Fyde and the Land of Light

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Incredible story telling

I hope these books become a Sci Fi TV series too! Get with it Amazon or Apple I don't care which.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Good story for Young Adults

Good 2nd installment of this fun, interesting Saga. Really enjoy Hugh Howey and I think this is a great series for Young Adults to get into his work. Really excited to see how the story continues!

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

As good as the First

I loved this book the narrator was great
full of action and suspence
You get easily attached to the the heroes

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

One of my all time favorites

One of my ask time favorites. An adventure that I felt like I was a part of.

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  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Not worth it

The narration is excellent. The plot is not. I enjoy scifi and fantasy because I can suspend belief. SPOILER: In first part of book, the group is at a planet with two suns. 'so hot the trees petified.' So hot and bright the natives must limit time outside. There is no apparent water. So how can the non native humans go out in it without any skin protection? How can they survive morr then a few hours let alone the estimated two days? Where is even the slightest research into heat exhaustion and stroke? Where is the MC's who is from an apperntly advanced earth's in intelligence and common sense. How could she do more then wish to take an animal from this place? The main characters say they don't know anything about that world or the creatures in it. The MC and her navigator spent years at the naval acadamy. They were trained and indocturernated to hate the dominate race of this world. The race humans had been at war with for generations. They discover mutual feelings from them. So how could they consider the trial wouldn't be stacked against them? The same is true for them being allowed to leave the planet. The MC is still in a style I hate. She goes, sees, overcomes all obstacles without effort. This is my last book in series.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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Not worth it.

1st book was ok, thought to try another but it is so bad on so many levels. Change of narrator was not for the better. Quite a leap in storytelling between this crap and Wool I guess.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Incredibly Weak Prose

So much effort is put into plot and exposition there's none left for humor, characterization, world-building, or making us care. What we get are completely flat characters and half-hearted occasional efforts. Molly loves Cole, Cole pretty much exists for nothing but loving and serving under Molly. Walter exists to be the annoying nerd, everyone else is already forgotten. There's a joke or a bit of world-building color once every few chapters. Molly is contacted by someone claiming to be her long-dead mother. The process of her resolving whether to believe this incredible claim is terribly slap-dash. She does, she doesn't she does, there's an info-dump about Turing Tests, and then it's settled, with no explanation or call-back and no use of the Turing Test idea.

The plot is episodic; this could easily be a TV series. We get into scrapes, we have predictable escapes, over and over. Molly and Cole are, no surprise, always noble and true and fearless. There's a larger plot arc that's just chasing a MacGuffin for now.

In the second half of this book, we run into a woman whose dream is to be eternally pregnant and raise a possibly unbounded number of children, dressing them all alike, calling them all the same. I believe motherhood to be a great joy, but constant pregnancy? Dozens of children? This is a really poorly thought-out version of what a woman's heaven might be.

I'm finishing this, but I've sped it up to 1.5x to get it over with quickly, a first for me.

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3 people found this helpful