The Arwen

Tim Callahan, author of “Ida,” presents his second title for Podiobooks.com:

When a comet the size of a small moon threatens the remote world of Regal the Earth Alliance assigns the most decorated ship in the fleet, the Arwen, to destroy it. Its Captain, Marjorie Cook, sees this as an opportunity to redeem herself after a tragic mistake in her past causes the death of over 400 of her crew. It seems like an easy mission but, when the Arwen arrives, it finds things are not what they seem.





25 Responses to “The Arwen”

  1. Doug Kress Says:

    I enjoyed Ida, and so far, I’m enjoying Arwen. keep up the good work.

    (beware of talking over music - words can be hard to hear at times).

    :-D

  2. Tim Says:

    Thanks Doug! I’m still new with the music thing but I think, after six or so chapters, I’ve got it down okay now. Let me know if future chapters are too loud.

  3. Sarah Alawami Says:

    Hey. no the music is not to loud but I’m running a compresser through winamp and the audio as I listen so I can’t tell. Good job on the story so far and can’t wait until the rest of the story.

  4. Tim Says:

    Hey Sarah, thanks, I can’t wait for you to hear the rest of the story! *GRIN*

  5. Alan Says:

    Tim, Enjoying the story and I can’t rate to hear the rest.

  6. Tim Says:

    Thanks Alan, more chapters coming shortly!

  7. Sarah Alawami Says:

    Just finished chapter 11. Wow what a cliff hanger and I love the music.

  8. Sarah Alawami Says:

    Just finished the book and Wow! I can’t wait for the continuation. good job!

  9. Tim Says:

    Thank you Sarah, glad you enjoyed it and thanks so much for the comments!

  10. Chris Says:

    Good story really enjoyed it, Reminds me of the optimistic, light hearted kind of sci-fi i used to read as a kid.

  11. Tim Says:

    Thanks, Chris. Those stories are a big part of my inspiration for my stories so it’s no conicidence. I’m glad you enjoyed listening to it.

  12. Tim Says:

    I loved this audiobook. So far it’s on my top three of favorites. The music was a great addition and really pulled me into the action. Great work! Any word on when part two comes out?

  13. Tim Says:

    Thanks, the other Tim! (For a second there I had to think, did I leave myself a comment and not remember?)

    Anyway, the second book should be out late September, that’s my goal date for it. I was writing it while recording this chapter and I just got done writing it a few weeks ago. I plan on doing the revision in July which gives me a few months to get things in order.

    Glad you liked the story and thanks for the great comment!

  14. Tim Says:

    It’s going to be a long wait for me until Sept. I was surfing around and found the other podcast you have, Ida. I just finished downloading it in time for work and can’t wait to get into it. By the way, I did a google search on Tim Callahan and it pulled up some interesting sites. I don’t know if you’re the millionaire Tim Callahan or not, but congratulations on your impressive severance package if you are.

  15. Tim Says:

    HA! The millionaire Tim Callahan, oh man did that make me laugh! Tim and Timothy Callahan is a common enough name that if you find something chances are, it’s not me and I can promise you, I’m not a millionaire (YET!)

    Hope you enjoy Ida, let me know what you think!

  16. Jason Says:

    I just wanted to say thanks Tim, and let you know how much I enjoyed the book. My only complaint - too short! Can’t wait for the continuation of the story. The strong point of the book for me is that you really developed unique and interesting characters and I felt like I had gotten to know them. The story is obviously science fiction, but I felt like you could have placed these people into any story and it would be interesting. Many science fiction stories get bogged down in the science and forget the human element, which is certainly not the case here. Looking forward to more of your work!

  17. Tim Says:

    Thanks Jason, so glad you enjoyed the book and I totally agree, a lot of science fiction places too much focus on the science and not the character. I really enjoy that kind of science fiction cause it teaches me a lot but sometimes it just feels like a science lesson. I try to bring character first in all my stories, mostly because it’s just more fun to write an interesting character.

    Arwen II should be up shortly and I’d love to hear what you think of that once it’s finished.

  18. Keith Says:

    I am enjoying the book but I have one quibble. Handling a comet by trying to blow it up is probably not recommended. Unless the comet can be virtually vaporized I belive all that would be acconplished is to change a bullet into a shotgun blast, maybe making the result much worse.

  19. Tim Says:

    Hi Keith, thanks for the comment! Glad your enjoying the story. Maybe it was in earlier draft but I seem to recall mentioning that the plan was to destroy it from the inside then use the Arwen’s energy beams to blast the rest of the comet bites. The Rulla and his ship was also supposed to help in that second phase of the operation.

    If that didn’t make the final version I’m sorry for the confusion, sometimes in edits things are missed!

  20. osmia Says:

    Chapter 14 and Epilogue, ends abruptly part way through a sentence for me. I think I’m missing the end.

  21. Phoenix Says:

    This is the duality of the self-published author: 1) Unique and cutting edge plots - stories too different or edgy for mainstream publishing. 2) However, the writing quality is lacking here.

    This is a great adventure, a nice story. If you get through the beginning, which is boring and doesn’t grab your attention.

    But the quality of the prose, dialogue, and writing is very poor. Getting your work ripped apart by a good editor is always a great thing.

    By the way, you have grammatical mistakes in your book’s description, and even on your author’s website.

  22. router explorer Says:

    I wanted to like this book for many reasons. The idea of the ship as a character is great. And thanks to Charles Stross and Ian Banks I have become a space opera junkie these last few years. However, there is one major problem and its quite simple. I can introduce it by contradicting the comment above: there is nothing unique here.

    From the second this story begins and through its rapid development you will be thinking one thing, Star Trek. The main plot line alone (saving a planet from destruction via comet/whatever) I think was covered in dozens of ST shows. The ship, its crew and their designations, the polarized alien worlds, interpersonal issues, a very Kirk-like brush with authority and idolatry of the ship, the “guest actor as infernal science/expect guy” - its really everything. And thats really where I draw the line here. This influence is so heavy that I see no reason to criticize style, grammar or dialogue (which are wanting).

    I think that if the description had said, “Star Trek Fan Fiction” I would have left it completely alone. Sadly, I leave it unfinished, wondering of the author, why?

  23. Tim Says:

    Okay, you caught me, The Arwen was highly influence by Star Trek, I am a huge fan and I love those kinds of stories.

    You asked why, well, I’ll tell you. I’ve always been a big fan of Space Opera myself and I’ve got a lot of ideas for such stories. If I ever write all those stories I wanted a ship and a Captain that I could easily place into the plot or idea.

    Even though The Arwen was influenced by other stories I did try to bring thing unique to this universe. The idea of wormhole space through the use of Strangelets, the idea of a religion that wanted the planet destroyed, the idea that not every planet automatically joins the Earth Alliance and, not every planet wants to join. The idea that even the Captain can make a huge mistake which would have repercussions on her and the crew, even going so far as causing the death of most of her crew. That’s the kind of stuff you’d never see in a Star Trek ep or book, at least none that I’ve read or seen.

    Thank you for the comment Router and thank you for giving the story a try. Hopefully my next none Arwen story will be more to your liking and, if it’s not, don’t hesitate to let me know! All constructive comments are welcome.

  24. Woody Says:

    Good story, good dialogs, good imagery, but, yes there is ALWAYS a “but”: For God’s sakes SLOW DOWN when you read!!! As much as I liked the story, I was afraid that if I sneezed I would miss half a chapter! And please, please kill the music, not necessary when the story is good, and the story is good!

    I did find one thing kinda hard to swallow: An intruder was able to to disable the ship by password protecting/encrypting the computer responsible for controlling the strangelet ejection,and no manual override existed to eject it other than blowing parts of the ship away? Mr. Scott would have been shocked at that oversight in engineering, Captain Kirk would have pounded the captains chair, and Mr. Spock would have raised an eyebrow and inwardly scoffed at the poor design.
    Oh well, one must suspend disbelief when reading sci-fi.

  25. Hope Says:

    EXCELLENT!!! Both parts one and two. YES YES YES please write season three!! You can’t leave me hanging!! I want to know how they repair the planet and if indeed Admiral and Captain Cook get back together. And if they don’t, how they continue. So please write another season!! Thanks

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