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Paul Warren

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One of his best!

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 02-28-25

Wow! I was moved and thrilled at the end of this book, really caring for the outcome of Glenlyon in addition to our namesake protagonist Rob Geary (of Black Jack Geary famed lineage).

I went straight from the primary Lost Fleet series to this, and honestly kind of love the shocking dissonance between the two periods. No longer are large capital ships prevalent throughout the star systems. Instead, a single freighter full of troops and supplies or mid-sized to even small but well armed ships can dictate control of a star system.

And now, in a period past the beginning of the colonization process, after long periods of peace, there are VERY bad actors out to seize control of planets now that Earth can no longer patrol and keep the peace. If I were to register any complaints at all it is this: it is a little hard at first to track all of the locations and names (it pays off well later by creating a deeper universe though, and the bad guys are SERIOUSLY evil and we don't get any motivations about them. Though, in 2025 that is looking more and more real.

The book does do the following well, and is a strength of all of Campbell's writing: he creates interesting altruistic characters, he writes civilian vs defense politics very well, battles and battle plans and their tech are always described super clear and very thrilling, AND characters develop relationships right off the bat which I like since past books drug things out a BIT much.

All and all, a must read if you like anything about space drama and especially ship to ship combat!.

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If you at all like sci-fi, you must listen!

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
4 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 02-14-25

I read this in high school many moons ago when it first published, and have revisited it ever few years since as it is one of my absolute favorite self-contained stories in modern sci-fi.

It comes front loaded heavy handed with a pro-capitalist/stakeholder POV of the primary main character (Lawrence) and the colonizing, but I promise you it presents a critique of this mindset as well (though heavy handed, as is Peter Hamilton's style). I have found myself really resonating with different elements of the story and its character's philosophies as time as gone on: first the teenage love story and how it spans time and space of the universe, then the desire to "regress" from technology instead of always driving it forward, and in my most recent read <spoiler> the end state of Lawrence where he turns from a life of service, of trying to carry forward the bigger picture and ultimately deciding that he wants a small life where he can personally be fulfilled</spoiler>.

Your milage may vary on how well you think the motivations of the characters are constructed, I find them slightly flawed but surprisingly large in their various backgrounds, but this book has some of the best Starship Troopers (the movie) style economies and world building I've ever read. Zantiu-Braun and MacArthur megacorp spaceflight/colonizing entities appear in different portions of the book and introduce my favorite future soldier tech: Skin Suits. They do life support, muscle augmentation, fire and weapons protection, use bio-muscle groups to recess or fire various weapons, and do it all with batteries and THE WEARER'S OWN BLOOD cycled by their own heart through valves on their necks. Sick mental design and you get to see a lot of creative uses of this tech throughout the book.

Since this is getting long, I'll also point out there is a well through out rebellion resistance vs colonizer theme, technology vs living within an alien ecosystem, how to use the power of ability to write our own genetic code, great ideas on battles of artificial intelligence and how they shape the battlefield, megalith structures immutable to the passage of time and civilizations that last millions of years in galaxies far away and long ago yet collide with humans for an interesting personal story for our main characters (Denise resistance leader, Lawrence the savvy soldier, and Simon the all powerful CEO of spacefaring megacorp).

The battles and skirmishes are great, and since it is self-contained you can have characters you thought would be with you to the end who die or were lost but come back in surprising ways. Finally, the portion on the planet of Santa Chico is all by itself one of the most memorable scenes in all of my sci-fi life as is the final dash of Lawrence and his squad to their objective in the last portion of the book.

It is a morality and personal journey within a brilliant sci-fi setting and the book hums along to the point where I don't think it ever has a slow point despite coming in at 800 pages. I can't recommend it strongly enough!

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Will Patton is a GREAT narrator

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 12-31-24

I just want to say that for this Audible edition I was at first put off to recognize the voice of Will Patton (it seemed like star casting) but holy cow was he perfect. He carried with him a very authentic feeling portrayal of all of the various characters and events: from a stellar Lincoln to the various women who were wonderfully centered in the color of the story.

As for the story, it takes a few chapters to build up momentum, but this is a very white knuckle look at the events surrounding the siege and surrender of Ft. Sumter. It is a sequence of events brought to a head by the characters and characteristics of Southern wishes to defend slavery via secession, by president Bucannon vacillating between sympathizing with the South or trying to push off events so as not to judged responsible for the inevitable conflict.

The fact that Ruffin, Hampton, etc. constructed their very concept of themselves around a defense of slavery that deemed it "good", out of necessity of not seeing it as such a gross treatment, renders this outcome inevitable. Many of the actors and attitudes resemble today, 2024, as well and I felt like there was a lot to learn about how the extra-Constitutional actions of secession were beaten back (albeit at great cost) before. Perhaps we can do so again.


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Nails the ending

Overall
4 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
4 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 12-10-24

I think some of the logic makes little sense for the capabilities and numbers of the enemy group, but I had to set aside the very black and white morality and paint by numbers/Planet of the Apes-esque fall of humanity parts the action.

Of course, BOY does the narrator make AIs with quirky personalities always sound amazing! It’s good for content and a recommend for library check out or listen and return in my opinion. 3.5 stars

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Go into this blind, first half drags

Overall
4 out of 5 stars
Performance
4 out of 5 stars
Story
4 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 12-04-24

The title character is quite boring, and my GOD is she repetitious in her thoughts and actions which seems to just be the author padding out the book to try and give it more meat. Things do eventually really get moving and once you hit an inflection point (which, light spoilers ahead) the book saves itself from my "DO NOT READ!" list.

Ok, spoiler:
I think a full 25% of Millie's POV could have been gotten rid of and we would have missed nothing, or else more nuggets dropped about her lethal mindset so we can see the wheels turn in her brain besides: my employer is crazy, her husband is nice and sexy, the gardner is hot, I'm sure everything will work out fine, but also I hope I don't get fired!

If we had stayed in just that POV this would have been a 1 star ranking (and narrator read her appropriately but again that flat reading is painful if you don't know something different is coming), obviously the author built to the POV switch and the twists around the Winchester's but give me SOMETHING to subsist on besides less than scraps in the meantime please! 2nd half moved very quickly and also added characters with more colored thoughts which sharply improved my book and leads to my recommendation to read the book if you just know what a slog the first half is.

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More excellent documentation of the industry

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
4 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 11-11-24

I wish it had been longer, but trust that Jason Schreier included everything worth reporting and clearly he had some good sources.

The book does rely on pretty strong knowledge of the games industry to contextualize HOW MUCH of a impact Blizzard had on the genre so I guess I also would have liked more of where developers went after Starcraft, Diablo, Warcraft, etc. or how other developers adjusted to their best in class games up until the free to play era where things seemed to lose shape for them.

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I don’t know why the jump

Overall
3 out of 5 stars
Performance
4 out of 5 stars
Story
3 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 11-05-24

It felt like a real loss to not have return characters appear and instead start over again.

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Throwback narrator, misleading title

Overall
4 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
4 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 09-09-24

I loved the narrator sounding like how I remember history books on tapes used to, however setting expectations to a more linear “how” description of Irish safeguarding Roman literature is NOT what you get.

Instead, you follow the authors thoughts on Roman vs “uncivilized” capability to write or extemporize in any form not deemed “childlike. The how Christianity was nurtured by the likes of the revolving Catholic Church and eventually taken back to Ireland before the much more hierarchical and structured version of it that we know was formed.

Then, we learn of its hero but not really the STORY of how many volumes came to be in their hands or which monasteries did what. So that it kind of comes out like a fever dream or bed time story rather than a play by play recounting.

It is an interesting story full of great research anecdotes not pertinent to the title, rather this should have been named “why the Irish were the ones who saved Civilization” - the How never appears.

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A better ending than expected

Overall
4 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
3 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 09-02-24

But that is because this series has been quite a letdown for me compared to Sandersons other works. Aside from the first and a little bit of the second it is soooo drawn out and most things are introduced with very minimal payoff as the pieces that come back are frequently instantly overwritten by another specific but uncannily correct plans by Braid.
There are some unexpected moments which I enjoyed and about halfway through the book we get multiple POV which is nice but still not done with the craftsmanship of an ensemble that Sanderson is capable of. This don’t really rise above entry level as a series for me but if you want to explore it it is very unique setting with a mish mash of tropes that never really congeal into something good or great.

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The stakes are risen, palette cleanser

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 07-28-24

Nothing but the best narration of course! And the story starts slow, purposefully, then ramps up very dramatically and just when you think things are about to go easy mode and predictable the cliff hanger for this next era of the series really raises the stakes!

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