Book Review: David Weber & Linda Evans’ Hell Hath No Fury
A meeting that went wrong on a duplicate Earth. Neither side knows who shot first, but each thought the other shot first. It’s battle between magic and steel-and-steam.
A meeting that went wrong on a duplicate Earth. Neither side knows who shot first, but each thought the other shot first. It’s battle between magic and steel-and-steam.
As Lt Cdr Matthew Reddy and the crew of the U.S.S. Walker continue their battle for both freedom and survival, the stakes are more personal…and perilous.
The scientific weapons of Sharona versus the magic of Arcana clash in the Multiverse, each thinking the other fired first and war snowballs between two powerful unions.
A futuristic monster has been pushing the Malwa to conquer the world with Belisarius, the greatest general of his age, and his distrustful allies the only hope for mankind.
Armed with lancers, breech-loading rifles, steamships, and galleys, General Belisarius, accompanied by his own ally from the future, ventures into the Malwa Empire, a sixth-century kingdom ruled by Link, a horrifying and evil entity from the future.
Aide, a human soul embodied in a jewel, journeys back in time to join forces with Belisarius, the greatest general of the sixth century, to stop Link, an evil supercomputer that is using its vast powers to rewrite history to create the powerful, technologically advanced Malwa Empire.
Everybody’s favorite general is leading an outnumbered Roman-Persian force to check Malwa aggression in the east, forced to action by the fiends’ sea-borne invasion of the Tigris-Euphrates delta and their subsequent siege of Babylon.
To free the world from the grip of the Horvath is going to take an unlikely hero. A hero unwilling to back down to alien or human governments, unwilling to live in slavery and with enough hubris, if not stature, to think he can win. Fortunately, there’s Tyler Vernon. And he has bigger plans than just getting rid of the Horvath.
Master spies, and enemies, Anton Zilwicki and Victor Cachat, are bent on uncovering the truth of a wave of assassinations against Manticore and Torch.
I received this book for free from the library in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Source: the library The Tuloriadby John Ringo, Tom KratmanIt is part of the , , series and is a military science fiction in a hardcover edition that was published by Baen Books on October 6, 2009 and has 400 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon, Audibles. Other books by this author which I have reviewed include Sister Time, Watch on the Rhine, Honor of the Clan, Eye of the Storm, Live Free or Die, The Hot Gate, Citadel, Yellow EyesThe eleventh or twelfth (I am really confused here) in the Posleen War (also known as the Legacy of the Aldenata), a military science fiction series. My Take Tuloriad is a bridge book setting us up, I think, for bringing the Posleen in as allies… It was very confusing at first as it kept jumping around in time and between groups of “people”. The story finally settled between two groups: one which the Himmit and Indowy Aelool had helped to escape the Posleen disaster in Panama and the (mostly) human missionaries, led by […]