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The problems:
Williams needs to make his characters work harder for their victories. Gareth Martinez has it too easy. It seems that even the author has noticed - he starts talking about the 'Martinez luck'. There is never any doubt that Gareth will win each battle.
The ethical position of the protagonists is distinctly dodgy and never addressed. I don't want to reveal too much but towards the end the hero kills several million people. He has a slight moment of regret and then gets on with his life. I think - even in fiction - that genocide deserves a slightly deeper consideration.
The physics is even dodgier than the ethics. Now, I know that shouldn't matter too much in a space opera, but the series makes real play on the authenticity of the space travel:
Can you really perform a slingshot around a planet while travelling at relativistic (0.7c) velocities? I would have though you would have gone parabolic and whizzed past before gravity could even deflect you - let alone swing you round 180 degrees.
Does traveling at a significant fraction of the speed of light really make you more manouvreable? If it takes a month to get up to that speed in one direction it should take a month to move at that speed in a different direction - you'll have travelled a million miles before you've changed your course an inch.
These problems call into question some of the innovations in tactics which lie at the heart of the plot.
The alien species are cartoon cutouts and thoroughly unimpressive. Little thought, little background - they are just humans with scales, fur, feathers, etc.
... Read more ›In the first volume, The Praxis, Williams has done a masterful job of setting the stage and setting the pieces into play. Now, we continue to follow the story as the action heats up and sparks (and missiles) start to really fly. Lord Martinez has become a hero of the Praxis, having managed to commandeer a warship right from under the nose of a massive and thoroughly-plotted conspiracy, and fight his way back to the capital with a skeleton crew.
... Read more ›|
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