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Firefly: Aim to Misbehave

The Firefly Series, Book 9

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Firefly: Aim to Misbehave

By: Rosiee Thor
Narrated by: James Anderson Foster
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About this listen

The ninth original novel tying into the critically acclaimed and much-missed Firefly series from creator Joss Whedon

It all started with the geese. The Firefly crew is eager to get paid for their latest job, but when payment arrives as a gaggle of geese instead of a purse, their stay on the planet Brome gets an indefinite extension. No matter that the geese will fetch a pretty penny once they get somewhere to sell them. Without coin, they can’t buy fuel, and without fuel, they can’t get offworld. Serenity is stuck.

Luckily the foreman of the local fuel refinery, Lyle Horne, wants to hire them, but not to work in the factory. He needs their help on a job only a crew like Serenity can pull off. Horne is an old friend of Shepherd Book’s. Mal would love to know more, but Lyle’s got bigger fish to fry. An authority known as The Governess has been kidnapping his workers. Lyle wants them back.

The crew need to break into her fortress of an estate and retrieve the workers. Jayne, who suffered a goose-related injury, stays behind to keep an eye on Horne while the rest of the crew split up to infiltrate the fortress. However, the Governess has her own story, as do the workers. Is Lyle lying? While they’re trying to make sense of it all, the workers’ children come aboard Serenity, with a plan to steal the ship and launch their own rescue mission.

©2024 Rosiee Thor (P)2024 Blackstone Publishing
Adventure Genre Fiction Movie, TV & Video Game Tie-Ins
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Could do better

Like everyone else who listens to these books, I love the show, love the characters, and have been delighted that these books have been created to allow the fans to keep going. This book is enimic compared to the others in the series. Not that number 8 was that memorable. Our narrator usually does a terrific job, but even he seems to lose interest in what he's reading, and occasionally delivers certain lines on auto pilot, adding to the drab and so-so story that this diatribe certainly is. Also, what was the author thinking at the end of this book? Captain Reynolds would never do what he did to an unnamed man... Not without severe provocation or just cause. Shepherd Book wouldn't countenance it either. The geese were just stupid, and referring back to the TV episodes is great for nostalgic readers, but only serves to show how utterly unoriginal and lack-lustre this 7-hour waste of your life is. Yes... Could do better... Much better. Was it written with AI? That at least would explain how soulless this effort is.

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