Unbeatable forces pounding on each other with no hope of an effect... then bang, one dies with no real buildup or legitimate explanation of how they were overcome. Just this time the claws pierced skin. Think poorly done superhero's with no real moral compass.
Half the book is the final battle. But it's a series of sequential one on one fights with everyone else looking on. Then the thing they have been saying is impossible the whole time? Completely doable with relatively zero cost. Then, we win!
Lame. Very very lame. Almost went two stars (disliked) but left it at three (it was OK) because some of the characters have more than a single dimension and/or are funny.
Interesting if you want goth space mages
It has lots of interesting characters. Spaceships, computers, and Magic... but swords are the predominant weapon...?!?
There seem to be some large logical issues that are required to drive the plot... but if your suspension of disbelief muscle is ready, there is a decent story here.
An interesting story that left me curious as to what would happen next... despite near constant disappointment with poor military tactics and culture. Editing and continuity issues abound. Societal memory doesn't change as fast as the author seems to think it does.
The book is basically Enders Game with mecha
1 Star - Hated It
2 stars - didn't like it
3 stars - it was ok
4 stars - liked it
5 stars - Loved it
Light read in the manor of Pratchett. Old children should enjoy it.
I found the book just engaging enough to finish. It's a straight forward book which requires a heavy amount of suspension of disbelief. I believe that young readers will enjoy it and it might speak to them in a more meaningful way than to a young adult or more mature reader.
I'd like to say right off the bat that the book is very well written, the characters develop quite nicely, and I'm sure many people will enjoy the story... My problem is with the storyline itself, it just doesn't feel like a post-apocalyptic story... it spends half the time in the time prior to the apocalypse and spent very little time developing the transitional period which I believe is the most interesting part of post apocalyptic stories. And the actual post apocalyptic portion is very simple, more of a expanded short story then the novel.
It is neither dark not particularly glittery, but rather a fairly simple story set between the collapse of all civilization and 20 years later.
The killer flu is unbelievable... A simple two day enforced quarantine would have soled the problem without a collapse of civilization and could have been implemented at any point.