Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Firebreak by Kathy Tyers Blog Tour Book Review

 

About the Book

Book: Firebreak

Author: Kathy Tyers

Genre: Science Fiction Space Opera

Release Date: March 10, 2026

What would you sacrifice to save your family and your home world?

Lady Firebird Caldwell returns to the world of her birth, Netaia, intending to introduce her young sons to the noble Electors while her husband, Brennen, conducts a military inspection. When mysterious ships in distress suddenly approach the planet, the Electorate sends her to initiate first contact. Forced to work alongside a vengeful childhood enemy, Firebird uses everything within her power—even her passion for music—to negotiate, only to discover their alien technology threatens all the worlds she holds dear.

Facing ruthless betrayal, Firebird undertakes a deadly journey to salvage the mission. Brennen must make daring use of his telepathic powers to save human life in the galactic Whorl, including that of their young sons. But saving the worlds might force Brennen to give the order that would mean Firebird’s death. In a galaxy poised on the edge of ruin, survival may demand the ultimate sacrifice—from them both.

Click here to get your copy!

My Review

I like science fiction and this series is entertaining. There is the mysterious and well shielded being advancing. Is it friend or foe? Does one approach to have communication or protect one's self from attack? The approaching being seems more advanced than Lady Firebird and her team. Firebird may be in a hopeless situation when she is all that stands between the advancing being and the survival of her people. And the love of her life is not with her for support.

This book has all the great aspects of science fiction I like. There is much advanced technology and many necessary daring actions. There is a relentless heroine in Lady Firebird. There are some who oppose her work, even as she attempts to make first contact. Back on her planet evil beings have again appeared so there is even more danger her people must face.

This novel is part of an extensive series and I did not feel it read entirely well on its own. The characters involved have much history found in previous books. Nonetheless, it is an exciting and adventure filled novel I enjoyed. There are allusions to spirituality and the opportunity for characters to turn from evil. Definitely an entertaining read.

My rating: 4/5 stars.

 

About the Author

Kathy Tyers is known for her award-winning Firebird series and two licensed Star Wars Legends novels, including New York Times bestseller The Truce at Bakura. Her messiah-in-space novel, Daystar, which concluded the original Firebird series, won a 2013 Carol Award, and in 2019, Shivering World received the Christy Award in the visionary category. At home in southwest Montana with her husband, William T. Gillin, Kathy focuses on writing, music, and short-season vegetable gardening.

 

More from Kathy

Is the Firebird Series “Space Opera”?

Kathy Tyers

 

You may have come across the term “space opera” and wondered what it meant. Sopranos in space suits?

The term comes to us by way of “horse opera,” those good old-fashioned western movies with horses and bad guys and adventures and sweet-rated romance. With space opera, it’s “head ’em off at the next galaxy” and the sheriff carries a blaster (a blazer in my books) instead of a revolver, but it often has the same flavor. Remember the sci-fi TV series “Firefly”? It acknowledged its western-movie roots with horse chases and train rides. Often, people who dislike most science fiction for its far-futuristic technology find that they enjoy space opera, because its beating heart is the characters who are having the adventure.

I’ve written two kinds of science fiction. My Christy-award winning novel Shivering World is what we call “hard” science fiction. The plot revolves around solving a scientifically plausible problem.

I like to explain the distinction between hard SF, soft SF, and space opera like this: All science fiction has a veneer of scientific credibility. With hard SF, that veneer has to be so thick that a scientist in that field wouldn’t scoff. I once read a compelling hard SF story in which the characters were saved by knowing the melting point of aluminum and whether it would float them across a pool of extraterrestrial lava (plainly, they were too far off Earth to Google it).

Soft SF has a thinner scientific veneer, with more emphasis on well-drawn characters. In space opera, the veneer can be thin indeed. Some people mock the Star Wars movies for showing that explosions in space go “boom” although sound waves are carried by air molecules.

Do Star Wars fans care? No! They’re in it for the adventure, the fight scenes, the fabulous visual effects, John Williams’s music, and the sense of hope that even in dark times, maybe goodness will win out.

Can’t we all use some of that?

In my Firebird space opera series, I keep the science plausible if I can. My telepaths’ ancestors dabbled in genetic manipulation to create those abilities. They exceed lightspeed using a technology that turns every shipboard molecule sideways to normal space (say quasi-orthogonal three times fast). My “magical weapon,” the crystace, contains a crystal whose X and Y axes elongate dramatically when activated by sound at a particular resonant frequency. I explained the crystace just once, at the start of the series, because what really matters in these tales is whether Lady Firebird will survive to have another adventure.

Yet there’s music in my space operas. Firebird plays a small harp, which becomes a plot point in Firebreak. All of my chapter titles have musical subheadings such as allegro con fuoco, like instructions for a performer.

There is also chaste, moral romance and deep love between a pair-bonded husband and wife. My sister accused me of trying to “create the perfect man” in my series hero, Brennen. I won’t call him perfect—no one is—but I think he’d be a catch on any planet. Then there’s Prince Tel, left a widower . . .

If you’ve never enjoyed science fiction, you might try a space opera, maybe even mine. If you already enjoy science fiction, this series could fall within your comfort zone, too.

Blog Stops

Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, March 25

Because Fiction, March 26 (Author Interview)

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, March 27 (Spotlight)

Artistic Nobody, March 28 (Author Interview)

Blogging With Carol, March 29

Blossoms and Blessings, March 30 (Spotlight)

Guild Master, March 31 (Author Interview)

The Lofty Pages, March 31

Stories By Gina, April 1 (Spotlight)

Fiction Book Lover, April 2 (Author Interview)

Texas Book-aholic, April 2

Tell Tale Book Reviews, April 3

Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, April 4 (Spotlight)

Vicky Sluiter, April 5 (Author Interview)

Simple Harvest Reads, April 6 (Guest Review from Mindy)

Books, Books, & More Books, April 7 (Spotlight)

Giveaway

 

To celebrate her tour, Kathy is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon Gift Card and a copy of the book!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

 

https://gleam.io/28yLK/firebreak-celebration-tour-giveaway

 

I received a complimentary egalley of this book through Celebrate Lit. My comments are an independent and honest review.

(My star ratings: 5-I love it, 4-I like it, 3-It's OK, 2-I don't like it, 1-I hate it.)

6 comments:

Jcp said...

Sounds captivating

bellagirl07 said...

Sounds like an exciting read for sure,
heather hgtempaddy

Rita Wray said...

Great review, thank you.

Lifesmartly said...

Spectacular cover

Michael Law said...

This looks like a novel I will thoroughly enjoy. Thanks for sharing.

DreaDrake1 said...

This sounds like a great book! Ty for sharing!