I'm not a fan of Dickson's novels. I think his style lacks something, and he tends to try to make connections in his novels that I could never see, try as I might. He also tends to portray his heroes as perfect, infallible...in other words, not human beings, not someone you can feel for. However, the idea behind the Childe Cycle caught my attention even at 14, when I started reading his books. In SOLDIER, ASK NOT, I think he comes closest to actually letting a character display some emotion. Tam Oleyn truly displays human qualities (albeit, usually negative ones), and Jamethon Black is probably the most sympathetic character, in my opinion, that Dickson ever created. I still don't like the prose of the book, but it shows much more feeling than the others in the series, with the exception, perhaps, of THE FINAL ENCYCLOPEDIA.