Reviews

The Biomass Revolution by Nicholas Sansbury Smith

birdloveranne's review against another edition

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4.0

Very good story. I listened to the audio version, which was well done, and corrected errors in the text. It ended well, and doesn't seem to lead itself to a sequel, so I don't know why it's marked as book 1.

ruined_elegance's review against another edition

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2.0

This is just going to be a bunch of rambling but I wanted to explain my rating. This took me a while to read, I kept putting it down but I suppose that's my problem and not the book itself because it is well written but I just couldn't get into it. I didn't feel like I was connected to the characters at all and only felt any emotion except for when
SpoilerObi died
. If anyone I knew wanted to read it I'd tell them to go ahead but I don't think I'd recommend it to anyone who didn't show interest first.

canadajanes's review

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1.0

Really badly written.

basketcase210's review against another edition

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4.0

Full of action

This novel was fast paced and kept me on my toes the entire time I read it. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who wants a story line that will not slow.

texannie's review against another edition

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5.0

A breath of fresh air resides in a futuristic dystopian setting that just happens to be in a world recovering from the horrors of a nuclear war. The Biomass Wars have left behind fractured lives in a State known as Tisaia and all the Tisaian Democratic Union (TDU) wants is a just world but the Council of Royal Knights (CRK) are bound to protect the suppressing and secretive government.

Nicholas Smith paints a terrifying world in The Biomass Revolution and has a way to make you keep turning pages even when you feel all hope is lost. If there's one thing to learn from this book: hope finds a way and "change is coming..."
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