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M**N
Why I read science-fiction
As a retired military guy-and a Technical War Gaming Instructor for the US Army, I read Sci-Fi to be inspired. I love new ideas - I love old ideas that fit into new technology, new ideas that fit into old technology. I'm carried away by the 'what-ifness' of a good read. Inspired by the rapid advances in technology applied to the military - as well as military technology filtering down to the civilian sector in my lifetime - this segment of science fiction - inspired from the early works of Robert Heinlein has always held a fascination for me that has never diminished.Those who complain of military societies' lack of dimension obviously have never served - or if they have - left with an experience they weren't counting on. That society more or less reflects the population from which it draws its members. The balance between civilian control and military decision making - mocked by some - is very real in our current military. The number of military lawyers present down to Brigade level (that) double as 'legal advisors' to the command is mind boggling - and woe to the soldiers found in violation of Rules of Engagement (ROE). These lawyers in uniform temper the command structure to remind them of their limits of authority - determined by political decisions made by civilian leadership.Character development may not be this authors strong suit - maybe his least developed ability - but still good enough to string along the technical fantasy he weaves. Again, military populations reflect the society that spawns them - and most militaries are the conservators of that nations legitimacy to its population. Flag Officers are political animals whether they want to be or not - it goes with the rank and the branch of service. A fact of life that through history has never changed.There has always been a balance between offense and defense - and in this future world of immense offensive power - defense is little more than trying to evade kinetic power that dwarfs anything we currently have on the drawing boards. Military medicine has always been first rate - since my youngest days in the service - to now - the prospective of an old contractor marveling at those advancements that occurred in his life time. A personal fascination that brings enjoyment with every page I turn.Gene Roddenberry imagined a multi-cultural future that may or may not come to fruition - and one who was born in New York City in the late 40's - I watched - often from afar - wave after wave of human migration come through my old town. It's neither bad - nor good - politically or morally - it just is. Cratering an author because you don't believe in his view of the future - is your right - but so what? Literature is meant to convey an author's view of future, past or current humanity - of trends that develop in one generation and mutate or morph over time. Be it global warming, technology used for good or evil or migration trends - a good author makes one THINK!Overall - I find the book for me - to be a page turner. Just my personal taste - waiting to see the what, how, when and why that makes reading enjoyable. Say what you want - a series that holds your attention - page after page.
K**N
4 Stars, good story, blend of old style talking about .c and 100 gravities in speed than say Warp 9.9999
Story was good. I learned a lot about pushing c. For me, I lean toward Star Trek and Star Wars type books, and BSG as well. This book really made me feel that I was in the cockpit. I usually avoid the so-called "great Sci-Fi authors like Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov, L. Ron Hubbard, Poul Anderson, Orson Scott Card, etc.Their works are quite boring in my opinion. They are lauded as wonderful but for me they were just writers pretending to write science fiction. For their time they were revolutionary.What I am trying to say is that, writing a space opera with no gravity, worrying about inertia, low speeds, and revelatistic effects were poor imitations to other scifi authors that used technology to circumnavigate the really stupid parts of our current techno-primitive space craft.This book was a mix-mash of past and future, no gravity, but pushing warp 9.99999999.The author did show some probably realistic turn outs about the future of mankind with polygamous marriages that are just thinly veiled sex-relationships that are mere legal contracts for orgies and fun sex, than actual families. In the last 50 years the attack on the family has been overwhelming, including the homosexual agenda to destroy the family unit. I see all of these things of our recent past to be foreshadows of the future that Ian Douglas has written about.Also the author talked about Prims who do not want to incorporate technology into their bodies. I can see the evil of that and how your very own thoughts will be raped by the government later on. Just like Grey whose very own thoughts were recorded in case he did something bad later or for counselors to punish later on. My God, that is where we are headed. I am glad I won't be alive to see such evil in the world!SPOILER ALERTWhat I did not like was that Grey was not promoted to Lieutenant Commander. Grey single-handedly saved Earth…literally with his sand missiles at the speed of light and he can’t be promoted? WTH! I mean Admiral Koenig sat in CIC and gets a medal in the 2nd book for saving the world? WTH did he do? Really? That mirrors real life. Shamefully so!This book grows on you. The bigotry against PRIMS is crazy. I can’t understand it.The book was good though.
K**E
loved it
Ian Douglas nailed it with this book. It finds a nice balance between action, world building and story telling.Military SciFi meets hard SciFi in a (modest) Space Opera way...Basically the story is about the human race in 25th century, still struggling with the effects of global warmingand the aftermath of a series of wars. Human forces and colonies are coming under attack from a client race of the Sh'daar, the rulers of what is believed a galaxy spanning empire. After having been trading with another client raceof the Sh'daar for several decades (peacefully) humanity gets an ultimatum from the Sh'daar (delivered by a second client race)...Soon humanity finds itself fighting an enemy it knows nothing about for reasons it doesn't understand.The aliens are truly alien, the characters are truly human . Loved the technology, loved the concepts, the storyand the setting.I've read this story in high-speed mode, had trouble putting it down (and getting enough sleep) - I ordered part 2 and 3 this weekend when I was about 1/2 through part one in the hope not having to wait more than a day after finishing the first book before I could continu reading.Top rating as far as I'm concerned.
A**W
Enjoyable read mostly
I love a space opera series and in fairness I enjoyed reading this. It paints a picture of the future that features technology you can get on-board with and believe could be possible. The same for the future geo-political landscape. Overall I like the premise of the book and read the next 3 books. The combat was well paced.My only criticism's of this and the subsequent books was the constant explaining of certain moments that struck me as a bit of filler. For example whenever Gray gets in his fighter there seems to be the need to explain about the Nano seal opening and reforming. This sort of thing is repeated through out the books and is unnecessary. And again constantly re-explaining Gray's background and what life entailed as a prim! I also felt the characters could be better developed and were a bit by the numbers.
S**N
American Penis Ship fails to impress
As others have noted the main warship The America is described as a giant penis and after that in the first paragraph it took me a while to take the book seriously, but maybe you never should take a book seriously.This book was not very interesting the first half the book is about a battle, in the sort of detail that i can imagine someone who was in the military (or an engineer) might find interesting, descriptions of why a ship was called something and what it would have been called in the "olden days".There were glimpses of interesting story in between all of the tedious detail, but every time the story started to get interesting it was stopped mid flow.
A**R
Fast paced, great descriptions
Military Sci-fi at it's best.The characters are engaging and identifiable. The physics of the universe is Einstein based and believable. The aliens are nicely different too.If you want hard, non-stop action with best guess physics descriptions of future weapons, this is a great book.My only niggle is that the author introduces lots of acronyms and then defines them but actually hardly ever uses them again. A new edit of the text should remove the acronyms not used again to keep the acronym overload to a minimum. Sill, I enjoyed the book very much.
P**Y
WWII with some new tech
Some action and some nice tech: Faster than light travel, almost-as-fast-as-light drives, shields and screens, orbital bombardments and nanotech shape-changing space fighters.But I can't shake the impression that the author has taken a second world war plot, with fighter groups attacking fleets, and tried to update it for the modern era and the future at the same time. There's new tech but no new ideas, and the new toys haven't been thought through - they're just there to hold the plot together, and things are only dangerous when the plot needs them to be.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago