KING ARTHUR SAVED THE GALAXY
NOW WHO WILL SAVE
THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING
In The Disinherited we learned that We Are Not Alone, but share this galaxy with the most loathe-somely aggressive communal aliens imaginable. Thank God for the U.S. Space Force.
In Legacy we learned that time-travel is not only possible for the humans of the far future, it's easy. But meddling in time can have awful consequences for mere mortals: Thank God for King Arthur.
And now . . .
The Once and Future War Duke of the Britons has been saved and as a special military consultant to the galactic overlords he has given the future new hope. But now that he has saved the universes, who shall save the King
Praise for Legacy
"This delightful book is a welcome sequel to The Disinherited. Mr. White's ability to capture a realm rich with detail and add adventure is without parallel. Anyone looking for a great read with a different twist should definitely place this title at the top of their list."
—Sherrilyn Kenyon, Affaire de Coeur
"A mind boggling action-mystery. . . ."
—Southern Book Trade
"A storyteller with marvelous instincts, Mr. White combines space opera high adventure with an enthralling peek into history."
—Melinda Helfer, Romantic Times
Praise for The Disinherited
"Mr. White commands our interest with an exciting variation of a favorite plot and engages our empathy with his nicely developed cast of characters."
—Romantic Times
"Excellent hard-core SF . . . Highly recommended for [all readers] who like exciting extraterrestrial battle scenes served up with a measure of thought and science."
—Kliatt
-
Product ReviewAgree with the inability to suspend disbelief on this one as already described. I put it down when the childish bitter diatribe began for the 3 book in a row. He would have done better with Augustus George and Augusta Chaneia who could lose an empire in the blink of a historical eye.
Posted on
-
Product ReviewSpoiler warning: You have been warned. Ok, SF and fantasy often deal with the Improbable and the impossible respectively. I get this. Still, part of the fun of reading them is that, for a moment, the author's craft is such that you believe that somewhere, somewhen whatever is related in the book could happen. I did not find that here. King Arthur, (yes, that's the one; round table, excalibur, British Celtic chieftan ETC. ETC.) makes an appearance on a spaceship manned by humans from Earth and Raehaniv slap in the middle of looking for Korvaash hostiles. It's too much. I could go no further. I hope you have better luck. I've outgrown the King Arthur in space sort of thing. It goes from fiction to just far-fetched and ridiculous. Perhaps ... if I was 10 or 11 ... but, back then, I had a Connecticut yankee In King Arthur's Court and that was plenty.
Posted on