

It was quick paced and had some good character development. It had enough technological explanations to keep more hardcore sci-fi buffs interested but not enough to bore those who don’t understand the base code of the universe. His agreeing to this delivery ends up leading him into what seems like preposterous series of events involving mobsters, a power hungry mega-corporation, literally certifiably insane scientists, smart alec AI all ending with the fate of hundreds of thousands lying in his hands.īG was actually pretty good. Lex has been doing his best to stay more or less on the straight and true but a rather unfortunate string of events leads him to agreeing to delivering a mysterious package. In order to make end’s meet -or almost meet as the case more often is-, Lex has become a taxi man/limo driver/freelance courier. He loses just about everything, his girlfriend, his job, his reputation, and his fifteen minutes. His actions were discovered and he was permabanned from the sport. In order to keep his bones in one piece and his lungs still taking in oxygen, Lex agreed to fix a race. Before the time BG begins, Lex was shaping up to be the next greatest racing pilot in universe, that was before his debts began catching up to him. On to the actual book though…īypass Gemini’s protagonist is Trevor “Lex” Alexander. I’m not saying Bypass Gemini was bad, just not as good as Lallo’s other work. I had read Lallo’s other series, the Book of Deacon trilogy (I highly recommend them), and was hoping that his endeavour to science fiction would be just as wonderful as that of his fantasy. The latest book I’ve finished was Bypass Gemini by Joseph R.
