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Armor
 
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Armor [Audiobook] [MP3 CD]

John Steakley , Tom Weiner
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (184 customer reviews)
RRP: £22.03
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Product details

  • MP3 CD: 1 pages
  • Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks; MP3 Una edition (Sep 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1433294869
  • ISBN-13: 978-1433294860
  • Product Dimensions: 18.8 x 13.5 x 1.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (184 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,012,411 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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John Steakley
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Product Description

Product Description

Felix is an Earth soldier, encasesd in special body armour designed to withstand Earth's most implacable enemy - a bioengineered, insectoid alien horde. But Felix is also equipped with internal mechanisms that enable him and his fellow soldiers to survive battle situations that would destroy a man's mind. This is a remarkable novel of the horror, the courage and the aftermath of combat - and how the strength of the human spirit can be the greatest armour of all. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Action, Heroes, and ? 19 Dec 2002
By Patrick Shepherd TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The field of military science fiction is a very limited one, with only a very few excellent examples, mainly Heinlein's Starship Troopers, Haldeman's Forever War, and Dickson's Soldier, Ask Not. Armor attempts to meld some of the great characteristics of these works, from Heinlein's powered armor to Haldeman's anti-war message, but it is only partially successful.

The first section of this book deals with Felix, a new recruit on his first battle drop. We are not given any background to this man, but is rather a blank slate that we watch as he and his powered armor scout suit turn into an impossibly efficient killing machine, becoming the sole survivor of his battle group after being faced with an opposition of literally thousands of human-sized Ants. We see a man of action and few words, whose interior mental state is oddly split between the fighting, survive at all costs, totally unemotional 'Engine' and a terrified, confused, and very fatalistic 'other'. When the 'Engine' is not in command, we see Felix have some interaction with other soldiers on the drop, from finding out what the survival percentage is for scouts on their first, second, etc major drop from some experienced veterans, to who their military idol is, a man named Kent, supposedly impossible to defeat in hand-to-hand suit combat, and a quickly burgeoning love interest in a extremely capable scout from another battle group. This is the best section of the book, as we see by their actions what molds a military group together, what values soldiers must have if they are to survive as a group, how emotions become a riotous tangle under the demands of battle.

Abruptly, the book leaves Felix and picks up a new character, Jack Crow, cynical, worldly, known for impossible (and marginally illegal) exploits, fighting his way out of a prison and onto a mutineer space ship run by master pirate Borglyn. When Borglyn presents a plan to refuel his ship at a Fleet science base on the planet Sanctity, owned by the eccentric alcoholic Lewis, and offers as prize to Crow a beautiful little ship and a de-activated scout suit for defeating the science base defenses from the inside, all the pieces are in place. From this point on (about page 130) I found the book to be totally predictable, from just who Felix and Lewis really are, to what actions each character would take leading to the final battle.

The characterization of Crow is not very well done, as we are only given hints of his past, a rather murky inside look at his emotional triggers and defenses, and a constant mannerism of lighting a cigarette at every available opportunity, mention of which I found quite irritating after the thirteenth repetition. Unlike Felix, whose past must remain a blank for several reasons, Crow's past should have had far greater explication to make us really believe in him as a person, to where his final actions would be more believable and not just a predictable stereotype. Roger Zelazny was known for building characters like Crow in works like This Immortal, but Zelazny's were believable, three dimensional people. Crow is not. This is unfortunate, as the characters of Crow, Felix, Kent, and Holly (the scientist in charge of the Sanctity base, and also very much a stereotype) form a group of different looks at just what it is that makes a hero, which is really Steakley's theme.

As a theme, it is distinct from the earlier cited works, and could have made this work into something excellent. But it is marred by several additional factors:

1. The shown high level military strategy/personnel are absurd. Any military consistently run in this fashion would quickly lose all respect by the lower level soldiers. The 'grunts' are famous for always bitching about just how screwed up the 'brass' are, but if they truly believed that, you would see Russia in 1917 all over again.

2. The Ants are equally impossible, seeming to have only one strategy, overwhelm through sheer mindless force of numbers, though they are supposedly a technologically advanced, star travelling culture. This attribute could have been worked into a strong sub-theme, but it wasn't.

3. The human society outside of the military is never really shown, nor is there really any reason given for the Ant War itself.

Thus the hero theme is forced to exist in an almost total vacuum from the normal societal factors that help define just what a hero is. And without strong character definition, it just didn't carry the emotional freighting that would have made this an excellent work.

Read this one for the opening highly action oriented first section, which is excellent. Then close the book.

--- Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
After reading all these reviews, I have to admit that I'm pleasantly surprised! I had no idea that "Armor" was such a cult novel with such a huge following.
It's revealing how many veterans gave the book positive reviews. It seems to confirm something that I've felt for a long time: Steakley himself may be a veteran, and this book was a way for him to put his experiences of war (whichever one it was) down on paper. Why sci-fi? Why not?
I have to agree with those who say that the book slows down during the Jack Crow sections. It's sad but true. At least J.C. seems to undergo some sort of character development (more than one could say for many SF novels) but the dialogue especially was only so-so. I would have to say, nonetheless, that the scenes with Felix more than make up for those sections.
Comparing "Armor" with "Starship Troopers" does neither book justice. Heinlein seems more concerned with the military mind than he is with the actual experience of combat. We are never told what Earth society is like in "Armor," or at least it's only broadly described. "Troopers" was about why we need a military (and, IMHO, is much more ambiguous concerning warfare than some unsophisticated readers would think); "Armor" is about the deleterious effects of warfare on the mind and spirit. (Except for the JAck Crow stuff.)
This book was recommended to me by a friend, and I would recommend it in turn, not as a great work of literature, or even great SF on the level of Poe, Wells, Clarke, Heinlein's best, Dick, Zelazny, Lem, etc. But it is a powerful book, with a lot to say, if we're willing to listen.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I had read Vampires (a book by J. Steakley and well worth reading) before, but could not connect it to this book because of the diffrent subjects. Both were so intense that I could not stop reading. Armor, completely diffrent kind of book than Vampires, still evokes the same kind of response from the reader. It fills your every waking hour and gives you believable images of the unbelievable.

Well, perhaps that is too much hype, but the fact remains that this is something not to miss. It is funny that there was nothing special or extraordinary in the book and it still was so intense. I guess it was just the writer. Have fun with this one.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good Sci Fi book
Really enjoyed it, good plot, interesting characters and setting, waiting Eagerly for the sequel to come out!
Published 21 months ago by Mr. R. Iddon
Better Than Starship Troopers
I worship the ground Heinlein walked on, and can forgive him a few of his later self indulgent horrors, because of the brilliance of his legacy. Read more
Published on 28 Feb 2010 by fat man on a bicycle
Quit Whining
I respect Robert Heinlein as an author. He is one of the best there ever will be. Yet, everyone craps on Armor for being a "ripoff". Read more
Published on 1 Sep 1999
Who is Steakley and where did he go?
Steakley is bewildering, fascinating, depressing, exhilirating. No-one compares.
Published on 31 Aug 1999
A fantastic, and yet depressing story
I purchased this book 10 years ago, I have read it 10 times. It is, quite simply, my favorite fictional piece of all time. Read more
Published on 17 Aug 1999
My all time favorite work of fiction
I'm a voracious reader, and there are few books I've read more than once. Some time ago I lost count of the number of times I've read this one.
Published on 14 Aug 1999
engrosing.well written, one of the best of the genre.
Forget the Starship Troopers comparisions. Heilein was'st a combat s.f. author anyway. Armour was only predictible to people who read too much combat sfi-fi anyway! Read more
Published on 15 July 1999
great sci-fi suspense
Loved the book. Does anyone know if Armor was printed in hardback? If so, how do I retrieve one?
Published on 29 Jun 1999
to good to put down
ihave read a lot of book,but this one really keep me going.it is not for all but everyone will find something in this book i have read it 6 times now and will keep reading it . Read more
Published on 27 Jun 1999
I forced myself to the last page
I must admit that I was fooled by all the great reviews on this story when I purchased this book. I found it to be a fraud on Heinlein's ST, overall. Read more
Published on 26 Jun 1999
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