Welcome Back to the Honorverse. The New York Times Best-Selling Series Continues with a New Volume of Adventures in David Weber’s Universe— Including a Brand New Honor Harrington Novella.
Honor Harrington is arguably the most popular character in modern science fiction, but there are many other stories in the Honorverse besides those in which she has the central role. This fifth volume in the popular Worlds of Honor series explores some of those stories with the help of top writers best- selling author Jane Lindskold, and New York Times best-selling author Timothy Zahn, and including an all-new Honor Harrington adventure by David Weber, set in her younger years, when a mob of space pirates made the mistake of tangling with Commander Harrington. In fact, that was a fatal mistake—for the pirates.
About the Author
David Weber is the science fiction phenomenon of the decade. His popular Honor Harrington novels repeatedly make the New York Times best seller list and can’t come out fast enough for his devoted readers. He has also written the popular Safehold series for Tor, and a best-selling epic SF adventure series in collaboration with John Ringo, with four novels so far: March Upcountry, March to the Sea, March to the Stars and We Few. His Wind Rider’s Oath, another New York Times best seller, continues his popular Bahzell fantasy adventure series.
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Product ReviewWeak imo, we even have details of a meal consumed during a meeting Honor has. The Harrington story was best of the bunch though.
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Product ReviewWhere's the beef? One pretty good story doesn't make a good book.
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Product Reviewthe weber story is great and the rest are mostly okay hence the four star rating
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Product ReviewThe Harrington part of this novel is good, and I really enjoyed the background in 'Ruthless.' However, I did not enjoy "An Act of War," by Timothy Zahn, because, like "With One Stone," it did not add anything material to the universe. I couldn't like any of his characters, and I found 'Charles' both annoying, pointless, and too mysterious for my taste. The armor supplement is informative, and technical fans will drool over it. In other words, ok book, but not worth ARCing.
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