Title: Explorer X-Alpha Author: L. M. Preston Year: 2009 Publisher: Phenomenal One Press Reviewer: Susan Shepherd "Explorer X-Alpha" is a deeply frustrating book. It has bits of interesting world-building and some neat technology, as well as a wide cast of teenage and pre-teen characters, some of whom felt quite real. But it suffers from the lack of an experienced editor, and will probably be a lot more fun for the young readers it is targeted at than for adults who regularly read science fiction, and readers should be aware that it is better classified as science fantasy than straight science fiction. The book follows a group of young people assigned to the same team at an exclusive summer camp. A company called Technical Exploration and Genome Research Corporation, or TEGRC, has sponsored the camp for its employees' children in order to get the kids interested in space and technology. This year is something of a test run, and the company plans to use the feedback they get to improve the camp facilities so they can start advertising it to a wider audience. Okay, so far so good. The plot gets weirder and choppier soon after the main character, Aadi, arrives at camp. His assigned group is introduced, and so are their assorted neat abilities. The kids learn of an insidious plot. There is a certain amount of teenage male silliness where females are concerned. There is a section that does nothing to advance the main storylines, but shows the characters using the skills they've learned and figuring out the best way to ambush and fight one another. About two-thirds of the way through, an event happens that throws two of the characters into a whole new setting, and after that the story gets a lot darker and more violent (this is not a spoiler, as the back cover blurb tells even more of the plot than what I just wrote). I had some fun with this book. Some of the characters were neat. One of them impressed me because I figured out pretty quickly what their Big Secret was, but the other characters never found out or guessed---and that's very cool to see, since most of the time new authors want their main character to learn everything about the world of the story. And a convenient plot element that I initially dismissed as ridiculous and poorly explained later turned out to have a good explanation. That said, the writing is terribly uneven. The publisher is very small and quite new, and it is unclear whether the book saw an editor before it was published. Homophone errors abound ("Your but is mine!" he roared. [sic]) and there are way too many convenient special abilities for my liking. Many of the technological explanations given are wrong or improbable (DNA does not make oxygen, okay?) and the antagonists aren't really personified. Basically, it was a very flawed book, but I had some fun with it. If you're willing to put up with those flaws, it might be worth reading. It's not nearly as good as, say, the Heinlein juveniles or the Animorphs series, but the weird world, hand-wavy science and unusual characters weren't all that much different from what I've read in K.A. Applegate's series "Remnants," so I think kids from, say, age 10 to 15 would probably find this book pretty interesting.