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- GUEST POST (AND GIVEAWAY): Life (almost) imitating art by Sean Benham, author of Blope
- A review of D.E.M. Emrys' From Man to Man
- A review of Lord Horror: Reverbstorm (script by David Britton, art by John Coulthart)
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Average 4.29
Hugo Award nominee 2006, Locus Award nominee 2006.
John Perry did two things on his 75th birthday. First he visited his wife's grave. Then he joined the army.
The
good news is that humanity finally made it into interstellar space. The
bad news is that planets fit to live on are scarce - and aliens willing
to fight for them are common. The universe, it turns out, is a hostile
place.
So: we fight. To defend Earth (a target for our new
enemies, should we let them get close enough) and to stake our own claim
to planetary real estate. Far from Earth, the war has gone on for
decades: brutal, bloody, unyielding.
Earth itself is a backwater.
The bulk of humanity's resources are in the hands of the Colonial
Defense Force, which shields the home planet from too much knowledge of
the situation. What's known to everybody is that when you reach
retirement age, you can join the CDF. They don't want young people; they
want people who carry the knowledge and skills of decades of living.
You'll be taken off Earth and never allowed to return. You'll serve your
time at the front. And if you survive, you'll be given a generous
homestead stake of your own, on one of our hard-won colony planets.
John
Perry is taking that deal. He has only the vaguest idea what to expect.
Because the actual fight, light-years from home, is far, far harder
than he can imagine - and what he will become is far stranger.
"Gripping and surpassingly original. It's Starship Troopers without the lectures. It's The Forever War with better sex. It's funny, it's sad, and it's true." - Cory Doctorow
"John Scalzi is a fresh and appealing new voice, and Old Man's War is classic SF seen from a modern perspective - a fast-paced tour of a daunting, hostile universe." - Robert Charles Wilson






