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Claws That Catch

Looking Glass #4 / 4
by John Ringo, Travis S. Taylor
Claws That Catch (Looking Glass #4) by John Ringo, Travis S. Taylor
★ 8.00 / 3
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It's Not Over Til The Skinny Lady Sings...

Working off of a piece of intelligence from the alien Hexosehr, the Vorpal Blade is dispatched to investigate rumors of an ancient and powerful civilization that may have been the creators of the "black box" that drives humanity's only space ship. Any remnant technology would be nice but what the Blade finds is much more than they bargained for. Worse, the ship is infested by an alien species of scorpion-like arachnoids that has the potential to wipe out a world. Worst of all, instead of being Astrogator, Captain William Weaver is now the XO and he is not getting along with the new commander. And the new commander does not get along with Weaver, the ship's female savant-linguist or most of the rest of the original crew. And what is that weird noise the ship makes every time it's in hard maneuvers?

Leave it to the oddball geniuses of the Blade to sort it all out. And the Dreen are not going to like the answers.

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Science FictionMilitary Science Fiction
Release date: October 25, 2008

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John Ringo

John Ringo

John Ringo writes science fiction that assumes the future will not be polite. His stories tend to open at the moment when preparation either pays off or fails spectacularly, and from there he follows soldiers, engineers, parents, and reluctant leaders as they try to keep civilization upright under extreme pressure. Best known for military science fiction that treats logistics and strategy as seriously as firepower, his work attracts readers who want action grounded in hard choices and believable consequences.

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Born in Miami-Dade County, Florida, in 1963, Ringo spent part of his early life moving through different countries before later serving in the U.S. Army, including time with the 82nd Airborne Division. That background shaped how he thinks about conflict and responsibility. When he turned to writing in the late 1990s, those experiences flowed naturally into fiction. His breakout novel, A Hymn Before Battle, introduced readers to a near-future Earth facing alien invasion and set the tone for what would become the Legacy of the Aldenata series, a blend of large-scale warfare, political tension, and sharply drawn human reactions to catastrophe.

Across series such as Black Tide Rising, Troy Rising, and Through the Looking Glass, Ringo consistently explores themes of preparedness, leadership under stress, and the uneasy balance between freedom and survival. His prose is direct and unsentimental, often threaded with dry humor and technical detail that reflects a fascination with engineering, tactics, and real-world constraints. With multiple New York Times bestselling titles and a long list of collaborations with other science fiction and military fiction authors, he has helped define the modern military sci-fi landscape. Readers return to his books not only for the battles and future technology, but for the arguments beneath them, stories that ask what people are willing to build, defend, or sacrifice when the worst finally arrives.

Looking Glass

Looking Glass consists of four books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.

Into the Looking Glass (Looking Glass #1)
★ 7.00 / 4
Vorpal Blade (Looking Glass #2)
★ 8.66 / 3
Manxome Foe (Looking Glass #3)
★ 8.00 / 3
Claws That Catch (Looking Glass #4)
★ 8.00 / 3


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