Midshipman's Hope Audiobook By David Feintuch cover art

Midshipman's Hope

The Seafort Saga, Book 1

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Midshipman's Hope

By: David Feintuch
Narrated by: Vikas Adam
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About this listen

When a hideous accident kills the senior officers of the UNS Hibernia, it leaves a terrified young officer to save 300 colonists and crew aboard a damaged ship on a 17-month gauntlet to reach the colony of Hope Nation. With no chance of rescue or reinforcement, Nicholas Seafort must overcome despair, exhaustion, and guilt. He must conquer malfunctions, mutiny, and an alien horror beyond human understanding. And he must save lives and take them - in the name of duty.

©1994 David Feintuch (P)2015 Audible Inc.
Adventure Fiction Hard Science Fiction Military Science Fiction Space Opera Space
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What listeners say about Midshipman's Hope

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  • 4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

The start of something great

"Midshipman's Hope" is the starting book in the Seafort saga. Having read through the series over two decades ago I looked forward to revisting it in audio form. This production does the story justice and the narrator does well both in tone throughout the story and in voicing all the characters.

The series focuses on Midshipman Nicholas Seafort and the trials that he and the ship Hibernia experience on an interstellar trip to the colony planet of Hope Nation.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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spectacular

an amazing Tale well told. I've thoroughly enjoyed this read and will look for more books from this author

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1 person found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Solid book, keeps you interested

I quite enjoyed this book, despite it's religious undertone.
The fact that blasphemy is a thing that ALL characters see as one of the most heinous acts in the entire book, should tell you all you need to know about this.

Still, that's only one aspect, and I really look forward to the rest of the series.

The characters feel like actual people with their own hopes, fears and desires, and questionable morality is very much a theme in this book.

The protagonist is no unflawed superhero, but a man that makes mistakes - mistakes that also have consequences.

Not hard sci-fi with detailed technical explanation, but a good story.

I enjoyed the narration as well. The characters all have a voice of their own, and you can feel their personality through their voice.
The narrator also does a good job at adapting the characters voice to the situation - when they're stressed, they sound tight, but all within their own sound.

I'll definitely get the rest of the series.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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A Tortured Soul Grows Up Quickly

So, you're a lowly 17-year old Midshipman still learning how to be an officer, still maturing, still ... well, guess what, none of that matters anymore because you have a job to do regardless of whether you want it or whether anyone else wants you to do.

You have a short time to grow up and take responsibility for your ship, the lives or your crew and the lives of your passengers. And now, to top it all off, you're under attack from a previously unknown alien.

How would you handle it? Do you think you could save the ship and get back home? How would you cope with the horrors your decisions bring?

Midshipman Nick Seafort didn't have a choice - the regulations clearly state that he has to assume the roles and responsibilities of Captain of the Hibernia. Every decision he makes eats at his soul, but every decision he makes ensures that the Hibernia will get to its destination safely.

I sent Audible an email 2 years ago asking that they get the rights to this series, as I wanted others to enjoy what I've enjoyed all these years. David Feintuch has crafted an excellent character study of a tortured (albeit to himself) sould trying to do what's right and what's best for those lives he's now responsible for.

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6 people found this helpful

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One of my favorite sci-fi book series

I am so excited to find that Audible finally brought this series to audio (granted it was over a year ago but somehow I had missed it until recent)!

Feintuch's Nick Seafort and his coming of age story was inspirational to me as a young man as Seafort is his harshest and most severe own self-critic, not unlike my own striving for perfection in my younger days. I still find the story riveting to this day (almost 20 years after first reading it) but I look upon the main character with a little more pity, a lot more forgiveness, and even more sympathy now. It's every sci-fi loving kid's dream to be a Captain of this own ship and following the tragic early events of this book, it's easy to wish you were in Nick Seafort's shoes!

The story varies in pace throughout and you are often left wondering where Nick's motivation comes from (you learn it wholeheartedly by the end of the book). The supporting characters are excellently portrayed by the author, although given to you through the first person narrator, you question the validity of some of it due to perspective.

I highly recommend this book if you are a fan of any of Jack Campbell's novels.

The narrator does an excellent job with the voices of all the characters and I hope he continues reading the rest of the series!

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Quite a different angle on military sci-fi.

I really enjoyed listening to this book, but I can't quite put my finger on why. The story has a very sober and serious tone. Bordering on dark at times. A lot of listeners have not liked the main characters self loathing. I actually related quite a bit with the his second guessing of himself. A good leader in a difficult situations, with life and death situations is going to have double takes and regrets. Looking back at this story now, I think most people have a predisposition of a comic book hero as a main character and when a writer tries to put some reality to their writing some people have a bad reaction because it's not what they expected. The part of this story I enjoyed the most is the stay on the new colonies and the writers perspective on how life on new worlds would be. The narrator did a better than average job, but not a 5.

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AWESOME, TRULY FANTASTIC. A MUST READ!

I am so glad I gave this new series a chance. I could not put down the book.it was so... Interesting! Adventures and action all the way.Nicholas Seafort is such a courageous character. A real hero. He is very charismatic and he draws loyalty from his people. David Feintuch is an excellent writer and I love Vikas Adam's voices for all the different characters. Very well done. I have already downloaded the second book in this series and will be listening non- stop through the night. I would recommend this series to readers who like fantasy science fiction. You won't regret it I assure you!

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4 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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My Tone Was Slapping the Hatch

Very enjoyable and believable.

There is little, if any, word variations. Everybody slaps the hatch shut. He say my tone was x alot.

Character driven with fairly well realized characters. Amanda is the only iffy one. Small cast, conflicts follow a similar pattern throughout. Well worth your money, looking forward to challenger.

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    4 out of 5 stars

Amazing Writing, Decent Story

I was very torn about writing a review for this book. I decided in the end that I would have to because I had so much to say that I just couldn't keep it all in...
The main character of the book is a 17 year old midshipman on a years long voyage to a distant colony. Through a series of unusual and unfortunate circumstances, he becomes the captain of the ship, with a number of other midshipmen, and hundreds of crew and passengers looking to him as the leader.
To be clear, this ship is mostly about interpersonal relationships, leadership, and personal struggles set in space. There are a few very short fighting and battle scenes, but It definitely isn't what I would call a "space opera" (at least by my definition).
For the most part, I thought that the writing was very good, with the characters not being amazing, but believable enough for the story.
As for the negatives... The strangest (and my least favorite) part of this book was the fact that religion plays a huge part in the story and the future that this book takes place in. There are prayers before every meal and CONSTANT references to "Lord God" and "blasphemy" throughout the story. Basically, the government has established a "state religion" and religious code that every is forced to be obedient to. I'm not sure if the author is himself a deeply religious person, or if he was trying to create a story in some fictional future... All-in-all, I really disliked this whole concept. Personally, I might consider myself "religious" (on a good day), but this really started to annoy me after awhile. If the whole religion aspect was taken out, I would give 5 stars... As it stands, only 4.
I'm looking forward to the next book, but am not sure if I will listen to the full series or not yet since the others take place much later in the main character's life.
It was definitely worth the listen. If you can get past the fictional religion, then I would recommend it.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Hard Sci Fi departs into wacky

Hard Sci fi that does well to be grounded in a religio-militaristic culture throughout 85% of the book that does a hard left turn into a monster story out of nowhere. Feels like a departure from the main themes of realism and human issues, then snaps back as if it never happened about 15 pages later. Feels tacked on in the end to leave readers hanging.

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