Old Man War John Scalzi Books
Download As PDF : Old Man War John Scalzi Books
Old Man War John Scalzi Books
Perhaps Cory Doctorow described it best when he wrote, "Old Man's War is Starship Troopers without the lectures and Forever War with better sex." That just about says it all, though it speaks more to the juvenile nature of the sex in Forever War than to any sex which may be present in Old Man's War, which is pretty negligible.An elderly widower, with little else to live for, joins the army. At the time, many elderly humans join the Colonial Defense Force because of the promise of a return to their youth. The Colonials are apparently technologically superior, owning the secret for interstellar travel (the skip drive) as well as the secret for eternal youth.
While the science in this novel is outstanding and the premise is good, much of the dialogue is contrived and trite. This is the first in a series of three novels and well worth proceeding to the second, The Ghost Brigades.
Tags : Amazon.com: Old Man's War (9780765348272): John Scalzi: Books,John Scalzi,Old Man's War,Tor Science Fiction,0765348276,Science Fiction - General,Life on other planets,Older men,Soldiers,Space colonies,Space warfare,120501 Tor MM-Tor MM,FICTION Science Fiction General,FICTION Science Fiction Military,Fiction,Fiction - Science Fiction,Fiction-Science Fiction,MASS MARKET,SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY,Science Fiction - Military,Science Fiction Action & Adventure,Science Fiction Space Opera,Science fiction,military science fiction; science fiction books; space opera; science fiction and fantasy books; best science fiction books; books science fiction; books sci fi; american science fiction; science fiction fantasy; speculative fiction; best military science fiction; best sci fi books; best science fiction; best sci fi; sci fi series; science fiction series; best science fiction novels; science fiction novels; science fiction best sellers,FICTION Science Fiction General,FICTION Science Fiction Military,Science Fiction - Military,Science Fiction Action & Adventure,Science Fiction Space Opera,Fiction - Science Fiction,Science Fiction And Fantasy,Fiction,Science fiction
Old Man War John Scalzi Books Reviews
Unlike most space opera, the emphasis is on character development, as in most really compelling books. If I don't feel I am able to either identify with or associate characters with people I've met, I find that plot or dazzling high tech isn't enough to make me want to do more than either finish quickly or read something more interesting. I was sorry when I finished. I wanted more, much more. Why? I cared what happened to the major characters and because of them how the plot would progress.
The book is a classic.
I have been reading scifi since I was 14 reading JG Ballard. I am now 67. And in all that time I never ran across this series or John Scalzi. I was hooked from page two. The writing style is smooth as a great bourbon and as satisfying. The dialog is witty and snappy, more preferable than yuck-yuck tales. I am gratified that there are 5 more books in thus series and many other to while-away the winter. Thanks, John.
Although space opera "Old Man's War" is not ground-breaking science fiction, I never-the-less thoroughly enjoyed the story. Author John Scalzi moves the story along at a nice clip, the main characters are interesting, and there's enough action to keep things from bogging down. Its a fairly quick read, and I will probably read the sequels at some point. The negatives are small its a somewhat familiar theme (with some unique Scalzi twists); and the dialog is a little hokey at times.
Without providing spoilers, the story takes place far in the future. Humans have advanced into interstellar space with far-flung colonies, but must compete for territory with numerous alien species, necessitating almost constant warfare. Soldiers are constantly recruited from among earthbound senior citizens, who then undergo some transformations to turn them into fighting specimens. The story follows one such recruit, 75-year-old widower John Perry. Perry's in for a number of surprises, but proves more than worthy as the story evolves. This is fairly straightforward space opera from a very good writer who keeps his story moving and does not over-do it. I recommend John Scalzi's (first in a series) "Old Man's War".
SCALZI, John. Old Man’s War series Old Man’s War (2005). The Ghost Brigades (2006). The Last Colony (2007). Zoe’s Tale (2008). The Human Division (2013). The End of All Things (2015). Stand-alone novels Fuzzy Nation (2011). Redshirts (2012). The Collapsing Empire (2017).
John Scalzi is a highly respected writer of ‘hard’ science fiction novels, by which I basically mean space operas with science. I’d never read him before but I got ahold of the first novel in his Old Man’s War series (aptly titled Old Man’s War, 2005) and liked it so I decided to read the whole series. The premise of the series is that interstellar wars are fought by repurposed old people from Earth reach the age of seventy-five and you can enlist as a soldier in the CDF (Colonial Defense Forces); you receive a new, drastically upgrade body with nanobot-filled artificial blood, genetically enhanced skeleton, musculature, organs and (green) skin, and you’re telepathically connected to your fellow soldiers through a BrainPal inserted in your brain. Serve ten years and you’re placed in a new, normal-human cloned body and allowed to become a colonist in one of Earth’s numerous new colonies. The series follows the footsteps of two respected novels about war in the interstellar future, Robert A. Heinlein’s Starship Warriors (1959) and Joe Haldeman’s The Forever War (1974).
The first novel (Old Man’s War) is good it’s filled with action and gives you a lot to think about. The second (The Ghost Brigades, 2006) is ridiculously convoluted with weak science as the hero thwarts a revenge plot to wipe out mankind. The third, The Last Colony (2007) brings back the heroes of the first the plot creaks. Zoe’s Tale (2008) retells parts of the story from the previous two books but from the viewpoint of a fifteen-year-old girl. Aside from a fair amount of recycled content, the novel suffers from tone Zoe’s voice is much too cutesy at times and doesn’t sound at all like a smart fifteen-year-old girl sounds. BY the time I got to the last two novels in the series, The Human Division and The End of All Things (2013 and 2015), my interest in following the series had waned significantly.
Along the way, I had also picked up three stand-alone novels by Scalzi. The first, Fuzzy Nation (2011), is a reconceiving of H. Beam Piper’s 1962 Little Fuzzy what do you do when you discover the cute little animals on the planet your employer is looting aren’t just animals, they’re sentient beings with wills of their own? Too cute. 2012’s Redshirts was the best of the lot, a funny reworking of the clichés of televised space opera, along the lines of a bad Star Trek (or good Captain Video) show. It was clever, tricky, fun, and in this context, the late teen-aged mindset of the antagonists and the sophomoric joshing back and forth that characterizes all Scalzi’s books was appropriate. The Collapsing Empire (2017) is a followup much later in history of the world, politics and devices of the earlier Old Man’s War novels. It reads like Scalzi is growing tired of that world.
Over all, if I were to rate these books, I’d give 4 stars (out of five) to Old Man’s War and Redshirts, 3 to Zoe’s War, and 2 to the rest.
Perhaps Cory Doctorow described it best when he wrote, "Old Man's War is Starship Troopers without the lectures and Forever War with better sex." That just about says it all, though it speaks more to the juvenile nature of the sex in Forever War than to any sex which may be present in Old Man's War, which is pretty negligible.
An elderly widower, with little else to live for, joins the army. At the time, many elderly humans join the Colonial Defense Force because of the promise of a return to their youth. The Colonials are apparently technologically superior, owning the secret for interstellar travel (the skip drive) as well as the secret for eternal youth.
While the science in this novel is outstanding and the premise is good, much of the dialogue is contrived and trite. This is the first in a series of three novels and well worth proceeding to the second, The Ghost Brigades.
0 Response to "[MY7]⇒ PDF Gratis Old Man War John Scalzi Books"
Post a Comment