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Ambassador 1: Seeing Red Kindle Edition
For years, I trained to become Earth’s new representative at gamra. I learned about their laws, their history and customs, the Coldi language, their all-pervasive loyalty networks. I knew it all.
(Yeah, I know I was a cocky little piece of you-know-what)
Then. On the first day of my job, it all went to hell in a handbasket.
The job. The relationship between Earth and gamra.
Kaput.
They killed our president. “They” being indisputably of alien origin.
I’m stuck on this strange world, where I have no help, less money, where my former allies shun me, and where you get killed for looking the head honcho in the eye.
And I’m going to accuse him of murder.
"I have been reading SCIFI for about 35 years. The Ambassador series is my latest new addiction. I have read the series pretty much non stop."
A science fiction thriller with alien political scheming and the occasional gun fight. For lovers of C.J. Cherryh and Elizabeth Moon.
Start your Ambassador adventure today.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date30 Nov. 2013
- File size1.2 MB
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See full series- Kindle Price:£9.73By clicking on the above button, you agree to Amazon's Kindle Store Terms of UseSold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
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From the Publisher

Entire series available in audio
Ambassador 1: Seeing Red
Cory Wilson is about to start his job as Earth's observer to gamra when the president is killed in an alien attack.
The Coldi are blamed. Cory has his doubts, but finding answers requires standing up to powerful people.
Ambassador 1A: The Sahara Conspiracy
An agent in Djibouti finds a stash of alien weapons in a container. The vice president challenges Cory to "get those idiots out of there" or he might pull the pin on collaboration.
Ambassador 2: Raising Hell
When the FTL network goes down, and the Coldi leader is caught off-world, society teeters on the brink of instability.
Cory attempts to intervene, but he might make things worse.
Ambassador 3: Changing Fate
A ship thought abandoned appears from deep space. Are the occupants really the people who left the Coldi homeworld to die without offering help?
Product details
- ASIN : B00GL27J46
- Publisher : Capricornica Publications
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : 30 Nov. 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 1.2 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 346 pages
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 1 of 13 : Ambassador
- Best Sellers Rank: 461,441 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 1,545 in Alternative History
- 2,018 in Science Fiction Alternate History
- 3,459 in Galactic Empire Science Fiction eBooks
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Patty lives in Sydney, Australia, and writes both Science Fiction and Fantasy. Her best-known works are the trilogies set in the Icefire world, and the popular and addictive Ambassador series.
She has published over 60 novels and has sold short stories to genre magazines such as Analog Science Fiction and Fact.
Patty was trained as an agricultural scientist, and if you look closely at her stories, you will find bits of science sprinkled throughout.
Want to keep up-to-date with Patty's fiction and get four books free? Join the mailing list at pattyjansen.com
Find more information about Patty including how to get four free books at https://pattyjansen.com
Customer reviews
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To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be a fascinating page-turner with a good plot and intelligent characters. The writing is well-executed, with one customer noting there are no lulls in the telling. They appreciate the book's cultural elements, with one review highlighting how it conveys the clash between different alien species. The book maintains a good pace throughout, and one customer mentions its effective functionality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book thoroughly enjoyable and describe it as a page-turner, with one customer noting its excellent world-building.
"...social science that really makes this book what it is, and the page turning quality will keep you on your sofa for hours." Read more
"I thought overall it was very good,all the different characters in the book were portrayed very well...." Read more
"...absorbing, vividly visual and with a wry humour, this is a terrific book...." Read more
"A fascinating book. I loved the way the main character initially almost blunders his way through events the events that overtake him...." Read more
Customers enjoy the plot of the book, describing it as an exciting and interesting sci-fi story with intriguing elements.
"...are always edge-of-the-seat in this book, and reveal some quite neat plot twists at exactly the right times...." Read more
"...This futuristic science fiction series is simply superb, incorporating political maneuvering on a galactic scale, mystery, adventure, alien races..." Read more
"...thrown in but you don't feel bogged down with and it helps to keep the story moving forward, I felt there were no lulls in the telling...." Read more
"I really liked this story. It starts with a bang and the tension of one sort or another doesn't let off...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its well-crafted narrative and descriptive style, with one customer highlighting that the author avoids over-explaining everything.
"...It worked brilliantly, because the words are all memorable, and they sound good. So do the names of planets (I particularly liked ‘Baresh’)...." Read more
"...It is quite well written and edited with a fairly coherent plot and a central character who has some depth...." Read more
"...Beautifully written, the author has the ability to describe and paint mental pictures of newly encountered worlds in a minimum of words...." Read more
"...Well written, yes there is so technical, scientific and the odd alien vocab thrown in but you don't feel bogged down with and it helps to keep the..." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with one noting how the characters are very human.
"...it was very good,all the different characters in the book were portrayed very well...." Read more
"...quite well written and edited with a fairly coherent plot and a central character who has some depth...." Read more
"...Cory Wilson is a likeable fellow that you just can't help but sympathise with as he passed from pillar to post and all the frustration that goes..." Read more
"...The ambassador is smart and fallible and very human...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's cultural elements, with one review highlighting how it effectively conveys the clash between different alien species, while another notes how it creates a plausible future world.
"...It’s the social science that really makes this book what it is, and the page turning quality will keep you on your sofa for hours." Read more
"...political maneuvering on a galactic scale, mystery, adventure, alien races (so like our own but oh, so different), intimate friendship, loves lost..." Read more
"...And, with Science Fiction, it's also about creating a plausible future world without dumping pages and pages of information on readers...." Read more
"...Some nice ideas about interaction of different human types - use of language, for example. Looking forward to starting book 2." Read more
Customers find the book's functionality positive, with one mentioning that the earth governments work well.
"...It worked brilliantly, because the words are all memorable, and they sound good. So do the names of planets (I particularly liked ‘Baresh’)...." Read more
"...The interaction between them and the earth governments works well...." Read more
"...great work pj... 10 outta 5..." Read more
Customers find the book intelligent.
"...The ambassador is smart and fallible and very human...." Read more
"...This book is for those who want intelligent and interesting sci-fi without an over emphasis on action." Read more
"An intelligent and well written story..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pace.
"Outstanding SF writing by a great talent. I found this book amazingly well-paced and flowing, the characters as well as the world-building were..." Read more
"I thought this book was brilliant a bit slow to start but once in it couldn't put it down will certainly read the other titles following this one" Read more
"Good pace, well drawn characters." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 February 2016A review of Ambassador 1: Seeing Red by Patty Jansen
Ambassador 1 is the kind of book you sit for several hours straight and skip dinner to finish. Or at least that’s what I did. I’ve read a few page turners in the last year or so, and for pace and chapter flow, this slice of space opera and political sci-fi is up there with all of them.
It’s clear that a lot of thought went into the background in this book. The various species of ‘alien’ are so meticulously presented right down to their fine details that I never thought of them as ‘aliens’ during the reading, but more of different evolutions of human life co-existing despite some quite fundamental differences in their values and societies. Having known a little bit about Patty Jansen’s work before I read this, I was expecting more of the physics/dynamics kind of hard science, but on reflection I’m really not sure why. It was equally engaging to see the social science come out to play, as the ‘delegate’ narrator Cory Wilson tries to prevent war between the various sides.
That’s not to say that phys/biol science doesn’t come into play. There’s a great description of time relating to space craft travel, some important research on planet climate, and some number puzzles relating to code to get the reader’s brain working, just to name a few. The science never weighs the action down though, and believe me, this book is all about the action.
It’s also a fine example of how action and tension are not the same thing. When there isn’t violence, there’s always a really strong sense that things might not be as they should for Cory Wilson, during just about every routine he goes through. Political debates and meeting with heavy hitters are always edge-of-the-seat in this book, and reveal some quite neat plot twists at exactly the right times.
Let’s get to the critical then: when I first tried Ambassador 1 a few months ago I didn’t get on with it, largely because opening with the attempt on a president’s life just felt like an opening that could have come from any suspense novel, and put me in the same places I got bored of from authors like Clancy or Ludlum. I admit a certain bias here, because opening with a bang often doesn’t work for me: before a character’s life is on the line, I want to know why I should care, or at least be vaguely interested in the person, especially with first person narrators. Ambassador 1 didn’t give me this. Don’t get me wrong, I’m now very glad I gave it a second chance after reading one of Patty Jansen’s shorter works (‘His Name in Lights’), but right from the start I suspected that the events surrounding Cory Wilson, along with the people he works with, were all going to be more interesting than the narrator himself.
Did I get to like Cory Wilson? Not especially, despite how he has empathy for others where some characters appear to have none. Was I interested in what happened to him? Definitely. His personal life crossing over into his work and affecting how he behaved was believable all the way through - real life ambassadors probably see a lot of the same troubles in being away from home constantly, albeit without the tendrils inter-species romances in the mix. I have to avoid spoilers here, but lets just say Wilson’s relationship with one character who spent most of the book conspicuous by their absence particularly intrigued me. Watching someone battle inside themselves with what they really want in life works well even for a character I didn’t feel a personal attachment to myself. I was more engaged by the Coldi characters and the motivations behind the people who turned out to be the villains (no spoilers) than I was buy Wilson. Although I’ll admit one thing I shared in common with the narrator: the fascination with languages and the ability to speak several.
I’ve never made this comment about a book before, but I think my favourite thing was actually the names of the places and the snippets of made up language. Making up languages is extremely difficult unless you specialise in it (and for the record I don’t, but I’ve tried some research and it baffled me completely), and the author went for the approach of having everything in English but inserting narrative indications of where languages switched, with the occasional single-word inserted in ‘Coldi’ or other tongues. It worked brilliantly, because the words are all memorable, and they sound good. So do the names of planets (I particularly liked ‘Baresh’). There’s a great line about how verbs can become nouns in one language (I speak German fluently, and this often happens in that language) and the idea of different pronouns for situations and tone and who you’re addressing is spot on (it’s been a while since I dabbled in it, but I think Japanese works in a similar way). And I have enjoyed a couple of other reviewer comments about how Cory Wilson is a languages expert and yet frequently curses. Trust me, if you go on a cultural exchange or to live abroad, one of the first things you learn to do is curse!
I would recommend this book to anyone who likes their science fiction to be believable but also a little further removed from the real world than really hard-sf tends to be. It’s the social science that really makes this book what it is, and the page turning quality will keep you on your sofa for hours.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 October 2016I thought overall it was very good,all the different characters in the book were portrayed very well.I didn't know which way the story was taking me,was it earth people planning to go to war or any of the other worlds out there trying to force earth to declare war.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 May 2021This is a pretty soft SF story which is more of a political thriller. It is quite well written and edited with a fairly coherent plot and a central character who has some depth.
The story takes place on Earth and another world, but the other world could easily just be another country. There are several references to the treatments the main character has to take to cope with the high temperatures on this alien planet, but apart from that there is nothing much special about it.
The story is set in the future, and there are some technologies which are more advanced than today's and some alien technology which allows rapid transit to other star systems and a kind of telepathic bond between to people. These technologies are not explained and are mainly used as plot devices. There are some details mentioned of how the Earth has developed politically, but only descriptively: the different regions of Earth are not explored in depth.
This book was published in 2013 but it still uses the idea that humans on Earth are part of a human family created by an original human species and seeded onto other planets with life in the recent past. Douglas Adams could get away with humans being recent alien imports back in the 1980s because DNA sequencing was in its infancy (and he was writing comedy), but now, with the genetic connections between humans and all other living things on Earth being so well known the idea is ridiculous. Either the seeding of Earth had to take place billions of years ago (the Star Trek explanation for humanoids being able to interbreed) or all existing life would have to have been wiped out and replaced with physically indistinguishable, but genetically different species tens of thousands of years ago, neither of which would work here.
I did read the book all the way through, but ultimately it was disappointing because it was weak as science fiction, not terribly strong as a political thriller and had the problem of humans as recent alien imports weighing against it. Hence three stars
Top reviews from other countries
- Mad4grcReviewed in India on 3 December 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars Really liked the book
Really liked the book. Story was well spun with lotsa interesting characters.
would really love to read more from this author.
(there are other reviews who are detailed & accurate, please go thru them)
- Aline GrovesReviewed in Canada on 31 August 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars First of an outstanding series
Well written, engages you from the beginning. I look forward to the next book. A mix of action, aliens and a dash of humour sprinkled throughout..
- Margaret F.Reviewed in the United States on 13 June 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Alien Diplomacy Is Much More Than a Desk Job
Originally posted on Tales to Tide You Over
Seeing Red is one of my story sweet spots, in part because I grew up in the diplomatic community like Cory Wilson did, except that my exposure was to many Earth-based cultures as opposed to those from other planets. Not everyone can swing that community, but Patty Jansen does a wonderful job not just of the atmosphere but the attitude such an upbringing encourages.
In case my intro didn’t make it clear, I really enjoyed this story, and look forward to reading more in the series. Don’t let my comments about diplomats fool you, though. This is an action-packed story where whole worlds hang in the balance, there’s a deadly conspiracy, and you’re never quite sure where the dominant loyalty is or should be.
The book starts by throwing you into a strange situation with strange people behaving strangely. While I appreciated how explanations were smoothly tucked in when reasonable, I was still disoriented because of the lack of grounding at first, in part because I hadn’t read the blurb so came to the book completely ignorant. However, the feeling didn’t last, and as the complexity of the situation became clear, I was able to see how any attempt at grounding from the start would have been a data dump that confused more than helped. I’m mentioning this only because the payoff for that disorientation is most definitely worth the effort unless, of course, you’re the type of reader who isn’t bothered by the mad rush beginnings where you have to accept everything on the assumption it’ll be clear later, which it was.
As that picture came together, though, Seeing Red had all the cultural conflict and complexity I could have hoped for. The impact of history, personalities, and decisions is very much a living element of the story, even when the characters (and readers) are unaware just what is driving some of the events. This series is founded on the idea of a humanoid diaspora where every different race is related somewhere in the distant past, but their environments and cultures have developed in divergent paths to the point that they don’t always understand what each other means.
There are little details to emphasize the alien nature of the situation, like Cory’s bodyguards being nameless as part of their culture. Each time he identifies them by hair color, wearing sunglasses, or some other detail it offers a subtle reminder that we’re in alien territory.
Then there’s the social structure of the gamra which is based on interweaving, often contradictory, ties of loyalty. It means Cory has difficultly knowing who is pulling the strings of those around him and where their first loyalty lies. This opens the story to neat conflicts in loyalty, logic, and manipulation, again adding to the complexity and making the truth Cory is trying to uncover even more difficult. There’s also good seeding of the details as things come back into play and turn out to be even more complex than they appeared at first.
There was a little repetition in the descriptions at times, but really, that was the only weakness I noticed in a lovely story that demonstrates the power of diplomacy, the influence of growing up in a truly international community, and how success comes through being willing to adapt and yet stand firm when necessary.
In summary since I’ve gone on long enough, Seeing Red offers a detailed, twisted tale full of mysteries to uncover and what seems to be the issue often isn’t. Once the facts are available, though, the seeding is there to support it. The beginning might have been a sink or swim toss into a complicated situation without the knowledge to understand what was happening, but it didn’t last long before I started being able to figure things out, and it certainly added to the urgency, and difficulties, with which everything comes about. I like how the global problem is recognized as a symptom and something to address rather than a fluke, while the complex balance between cultures with very different values is fascinating. I thoroughly enjoyed this one.
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R. und D. DöringReviewed in Germany on 23 March 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Space Opera vom feinsten!
Ich bin über das kostenlose Angebot des ersten Buches zur Serie gekommen und bin inzwischen bei der aktuell letzten Folge. Lässt sich sehr gut und flüssig lesen, mit innovativen Ideen und guter Schrift. Jansen ist professionelle Authorin die sich hinter Ian Banks oder Robert Silverberg nicht verstecken muss.
Ich freue mich schon auf mehr.
- Mark HReviewed in Australia on 20 April 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping slow burner, very captivating
I had to work out what was going on for a good while and then I really wanted to see what would happen next. I honestly didn't know where the story would go as you couldn't tell which character was friend or foe on earth or off world. I am definitely going to read the rest of the series, taking my time to savour the experience.