I have always had an interest in military history. I have read biographies of numerous senior officers from different countries from World War II, World War I, and the Korean War. I have read books covering the actions of different military groups during the same periods. I have watched many documentaries covering a wide variety of topics that arose from those periods of time, including the socioeconomic impact they all had. Whenever I see this theme rendered in a story, I feel compelled to view it through a more discerning lens, to ensure the author is presenting an environment that has a consistent internal logic.
I loved the setting that the blurb on the back promised me.
The whole 'man out of time' trope can be fantastic when done right. I loved the character building, the world building, and the pacing that the author moved the story in.
This is the first novel in this series, and it convinced me to go looking for the rest.
The first novel in the New York Times bestselling Lost Fleet series!
The Alliance has been fighting the Syndics for a century—and losing badly. Now its fleet is crippled and stranded in enemy territory. Their only hope is a man who's emerged from a century-long hibernation to find he has been heroically idealized beyond belief....
Captain John “Black Jack” Geary’s exploits are known to every schoolchild. Revered for his heroic “last stand” in the early days of the war, he was presumed dead. But a century later, Geary miraculously returns and reluctantly takes command of the Alliance Fleet as it…
I have loved Robert Asprin as a storyteller since I read his fantasy series.
When I saw his name on a sci-fi action/adventure/comedy, I knew I had to give it a go. I am very glad I did. I loved the main character and how he was introduced; it had to be one of the best setups I have ever read in this genre.
This novel went by too fast. I finished it in just over a day because I did not want to put it down.
Willard J. Phule, the rich son of a millionaire arms manufacturer, reforms a group of misfits in the Space Legion, a fictional organization similar to the French Foreign Legion, into an "elite fighting force".
If you love science-fiction, fantasy and horror, but don't have time for an entire novel, try these short stories.
They have all (but one) been previously published in various anthologies and online - the 'bonus' story being a new tale set in the 'Unreachable Skies' universe.
Lewrie is going up the ranks, and watching/reading his attempts at being a proper officer while keeping his inner rogue nature in check is fantastically satisfying. I was absolutely fascinated following his adventures this time.
Even if this is the 6th novel in the series, I could not predict how each choice was going to resolve.
Our favourite rakish sailor, Alan Lewrie, returns in this thrilling historical naval adventure.
It is 1793, and Alan Lewrie, swashbuckling naval warrior turned family man, longs for battle. Oppressed by life as a gentleman farmer, when revolutionary France draws Britain into war, Lewrie is only too pleased to answer the navy's call.
But life aboard the H.M.S Cockerel is marred by a malaria-stricken tyrant of a captain and a restless crew. When the war escalates Lewrie finds himself at the Battle of Toulon where he meets a dashing young Napoleon Bonaparte. Outnumbered three to one, Lewrie takes on the French…
I loved the setting for this novel, the first command of the young officer.
I loved the setting and the cultures that he introduced. I found the main character to be so believable and someone I could easily sympathize with. The choices they face and the decisions they make are not simple, and so very human.
I had no problems whatsoever with getting lost in a story set many hundreds of years in the future.
A series of galactic empire building, space battles, and the personal struggle of an exiled war leader to bring down the Galactic Empire that killed his mother and destroyed the Keeno Order.
I found this book when surfing the Baen public library on their site. It was free to read, and I liked some of the short stories I had read from Eric Flint.
Holy crap, nothing prepared me for the rollercoaster ride that this novel was. I loved the no-nonsense character that he gave to the main character. Add to that the fantastic alt-history spin he put to the story, and I was hooked.
I can completely understand why so many other authors added their own stories to the universe that Eric Flint created.
My novel is a contemporary science fiction that revolves around a murder mystery and first contact.
The story all takes place in an alien culture, and the main characters are a security technician tasked with finding the murderer and a researcher with the responsibility of analyzing the newly discovered race, humanity.
A series of galactic empire building, space battles, and the personal struggle of an exiled war leader to bring down the Galactic Empire that killed his mother and destroyed the Keeno Order.
Johnny Talon and the Goddess of Love and War
by
W.B.J. Williams,
The spirits, sorcerers, and truly desperate in San Francisco’s seedy neighborhoods know Johnny Talon, a private detective who can solve impenetrable cases in a way no one else can. His use of lucid dreams and subconscious insights lead him to the truth.