
Last Contact: Galaxy's Edge Season 2, Book 5
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The next thrilling installment in the epic military sci-fi Galaxy’s Edge series that fans are craving!
Galaxy's Edge Season 2 continues as Wraith discovers crucial intel about the threat out past The Gap, beyond Galaxy's Edge. Meanwhile, Prisma undertakes and arduous journey and the legionnaires of Zombie Squad search for Masters.
©2022 Galaxy's Edge LLC. (P)2022 Podium Audio
- Listening Length11 hours and 19 minutes
- Audible release date3 May 2022
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB09V1XK9SX
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 11 hours and 19 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Jason Anspach, Nick Cole |
Narrator | R.C. Bray |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com.au Release Date | 03 May 2022 |
Publisher | Podium Audio |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B09V1XK9SX |
Best Sellers Rank | 1,359 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) 22 in Military Science Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) 56 in Adventure Science Fiction 58 in Space Opera Science Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) |
Customer reviews
4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
450 global ratings
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Top review from Australia
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TOP 100 REVIEWER
Verified Purchase
A good entry. A lege gets rescued and the squad find out that one of the galaxy's trouble maker species has suddenly become militarily competent. Meanwhile the quest to obtain the tech on the savage hulk reveals something new about how the galaxy's government sabotaged itself. Prisma and her muther begin her training and it seems that she has an agenda. Prisma will have some hard choices to make in the future. We also get some more reveals about Crow and his past out in the desert. All these threads are connected and it will be fun to see what happens next.
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Top reviews from other countries

Ajh
5.0 out of 5 stars
Riveting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 June 2022Verified Purchase
Another cracking episode in the series of book
Bit slow at some points but picks up.nice to the end and setting up for following books
Bit slow at some points but picks up.nice to the end and setting up for following books

Kindle Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Read
Reviewed in Canada on 5 May 2022Verified Purchase
Compelling plot. Well written. Many loose ends now starting to come together. LONG series, hopefully coming to an end in next book.

Mal Ware
5.0 out of 5 stars
The plot is finally moving forward
Reviewed in the United States on 4 May 2022Verified Purchase
It’s not a dominant theme in any respect but I usually appreciate the small dose of abstract constructs that have been showing up throughout this series. Usually they’re just thought-provoking one-offs, have a lot of build up to a particular theme, or they’re explored by side characters for a specific purpose. I think they serve as great accents that are generally well woven into a very human concept that keeps showing up. This time around some of it was a little more esoteric than it’s been in the past but there was only one particular note that felt a bit awkward.
The group of allies assault a Savage ship and one of the only ways the things they’re fighting die is to think a specific way when they’re killed. To kill with ‘intention’. It’s weird and I don’t feel the payoff or where it’s coming from. I think they’re hoping to round out the mechanics of a specific layer they’ve been in the process of introducing. It comes off more frivolous or indulgent than anything else. I may never fully buy into that the way I don’t like the way the Mandarins simplify the previous narrative away from human frailty, the psychic dog, or Boxin taking the next step beyond simply being a cyborg. Then again, some of the Savages have always been tied up with quantum concepts and a unique type of interaction with the mind so it’s interesting—even promising, if not necessarily a draw for me—that Prisma and the woman who claims to be her mom are converging onto the same sphere of influence and characters.
I think if you’ve read the series up to this point it certainly offers more progression than we’ve seen since maybe the confrontation that followed Imperator. A ton of small revelations that all bring more questions. The epilogue and that whole plot thread is bizarre but marks a significant step forward for the what the overarching players and plot are building up to. There’s definitely less engagement with the valuations that drive a particular type of military performance but the mission directives aren’t really that kind of campaign.
The group of allies assault a Savage ship and one of the only ways the things they’re fighting die is to think a specific way when they’re killed. To kill with ‘intention’. It’s weird and I don’t feel the payoff or where it’s coming from. I think they’re hoping to round out the mechanics of a specific layer they’ve been in the process of introducing. It comes off more frivolous or indulgent than anything else. I may never fully buy into that the way I don’t like the way the Mandarins simplify the previous narrative away from human frailty, the psychic dog, or Boxin taking the next step beyond simply being a cyborg. Then again, some of the Savages have always been tied up with quantum concepts and a unique type of interaction with the mind so it’s interesting—even promising, if not necessarily a draw for me—that Prisma and the woman who claims to be her mom are converging onto the same sphere of influence and characters.
I think if you’ve read the series up to this point it certainly offers more progression than we’ve seen since maybe the confrontation that followed Imperator. A ton of small revelations that all bring more questions. The epilogue and that whole plot thread is bizarre but marks a significant step forward for the what the overarching players and plot are building up to. There’s definitely less engagement with the valuations that drive a particular type of military performance but the mission directives aren’t really that kind of campaign.
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DFJ 150
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Metaphysical Mess
Reviewed in the United States on 26 May 2022Verified Purchase
Earlier books in the series have been very engaging and entertaining, but this one, and the last, have gone off the rails. The whole Crometheus/arcade/rock god subplot is a jumbled waste of time, and has not enhanced the story at all. The simulated battles on the savage hulk seem like a drug addled fever dream. Manufactured enemies which exist in two realms at once? And, apparently they can only be “killed” if one shoots them in the proper frame of mind, i.e. with true intent to actually kill them. I haven’t read any military sci-fi where the combatants were nonchalant about pulling the trigger. This series has now veered from sci-fi into fantasy, and it doesn’t serve the plot line well. Mr. Cole would do well to bring the books back into the military mode and skip the mystical crap. And, BTW, a Hellcat does NOT rev to 45,000 rpm’s.
2 people found this helpful
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Fitzgerald
5.0 out of 5 stars
So many groups and characters in play, but it works.
Reviewed in the United States on 26 May 2022Verified Purchase
We’re left with a few very big questions at the end but the other story lines where excellent and answered some much needed explanations. Earth is mentioned again and two characters from earth before the great exodus are also introduced.
Crometheus is seeing through the controls and Keel is finally in full control of the suit that will most likely save the galaxy. Some really hard losses in this book but those developments are setting us up for the end game.
Also very glad Masters was found and rescued, but the cost was maybe too high.
Crometheus is seeing through the controls and Keel is finally in full control of the suit that will most likely save the galaxy. Some really hard losses in this book but those developments are setting us up for the end game.
Also very glad Masters was found and rescued, but the cost was maybe too high.