This Omni-trade paperback volume collects the first four novels in the series: At Any Price, Counting the Cost, Rolling Hot, and The Warrior-all have been out of print and unavailable for several years..
Neither stainless white knights nor bloodthirsty killers, the Slammers are competent professionals, with recognizable human flaws, engaged in a deadly business. Their internal conflicts, set against vivid scenes of battle, make their stories exciting and compelling.
This is the second of the three volume set presenting for the first time the entire genre-defining Slammers series in uniform Omni-trade paperback volumes, with new introductions by major SF figures and new afterwords by David Drake. Each volume will also include a Slammers story not collected in previous Slammer's books.
David Drake is an American author of science fiction and fantasy literature. A Vietnam War veteran who has worked as a lawyer, he is now one of the major authors of the military science fiction genre.
I love this series and I think it is the best military sci-fi I have read so far (not that I'm a super expert on the subgenre). The quality is high even in this sophomore volume, but I think the short-story format used in the first one works better for Hammer's Slammers' kind of stories. Here we have four novels (At Any Price, Counting The Cost, Rolling Hot, The Warrior) and an exclusive novelet called The Day Of Glory. In the first novel classic sci-fi elements and military tropes are well balanced, while the rest could be set in the present or recent past, if not for the futuristic technology used and the references to other planets. So, if you are looking for space-opera or mindblowing concepts, this is not really the right place. Instead, we will find realistic portraits of combat and war informed by the author's experience in Vietnam, with a lot of military terms and descriptions of combat operations. This is where the longer novel format can become a little bit daunting with its non-stop action that can last many, many pages, and even chapters. It's especially true for the last two novels, while I think the second one is the best overall with its use of "political" themes together with military strategies and engrossing fights. Nevertheless, this still is a top-notch collection with a very realistic view of war and how soldiers think and act, with stories that just happen in a far future on other planets.
Gritty war porn following the mercenary tank battalion under Colonel Alois Hammer. Some excellent battle scenes and lots of them. When not fighting the focus is on the psychology of the fighting soldier. Rarely are officers involved, other than as obstacles, as we discover how different people react to warfare. Mostly a bunch of farmers, leavened with some dead-enders, trying to escape the tedium of their rural life with the excitement of travel and exotic locales. Which quickly devolves into barracks living and camp followers, with basically no interaction with the locals. Other than shooting them.
Drake has clearly used his own experience in Viet Nam, combined with the experiences of others in country, as fodder for these stories. Most obvious is a story based on the Tet Offensive, from the POV of a tank unit trying to reach the capital in time to rescue the government.
More than just battles, these stories get inside the minds of the common soldier. Not always the best place to be.
Overall between a 4 and a 5. A good collection of stories here, reviewed elsewhere, but nicely capped off as well by the short story, which is a bit of a welcome change of pace after the Warrior, but still highlights well how brutal war is. Overall, David Drake captures well throughout the volume the realities of war, with believable characters and character reactions, making for a good overall read.
Drake puts the readers into the tanks, and combat cars of his characters, and gives us some gritty insight into combat situations. Always cohesive, always interesting, and realistic. Drake’s time with tanks in Vietnam gives credibility to his plots and scenarios. Great stories.
Easy fast SF collection of stories. Read most of these stories before, but still fun.
Cynical political commentary have always helped these to click with me. Not too heavy, but clear and reflects 20th century geopolitics pretty darn well, but without being tied to real world time or place.
This book has my favorite in the Hammer's Slammers series so far. These stories are all more along the lines of being novel length rather than the much shorter stories in volume 1.
A collection of military sci fi novels. The novels are good enough for awards, the short stories are ok. So much action that it sometimes disguises a valid plot.
This book is very well done. From someone who was in 1st Armored Division, it is fairly Realistic from many perspectives. I can't wait to finish the series.
All but one are stories that have been published before. The stories published in this collection keep you guessing and are written like only Drake can.
The past four reviews I've done (At Any Price, Counting the Cost, Rolling Hot, and The Warrior) were all from this book. This book also has a novelet (really more of a short story) called The Day of Glory that covers a recruitment drive in a country town by a local government, followed by a brief battle involving the Slammers and an opposing mercenary company. The author doesn't hold back on his disdain for governmental promises to enlistees. Overall though I enjoyed the collection along with the essays included, it raised many interesting questions regarding the nature of war and the choices faced by the soldiers who fight it.
Drake re fights Viet Nam by telling about honorable warriors hampered by effeminate politicians and incompetent draftees. Despite these self-serving prejudices, he spins an entertaining story.
Simply some of the best military fiction I've ever read. I first read the stories as a teenager, and later re-read them in this collection as an adult.
A lot of military fiction comes across with the attitude that only soldiers know how to get things done, and that if the civilians would just get out of the way and let them do their jobs then everything would be a lot better.
I used to read that attitude into the Slammers, but it's not really there. What's there is the attitude that good soldiers know how to do their job, and their job is to kill and destroy. What's also there, although mostly implied rather than stated, is that unless you specifically want people killed and things destroyed, then maybe you should come up with a way of doing things that doesn't involve soldiers. In other words, war is a last resort, and will either not get you what you wanted, or get it with consequences that aren't acceptable to you.
It's not wrong to declare that this is more of the same type of material that was in the first volume, but I think the stories in this one are a lot stronger because Drake spends more time on characters. Despite this being a pulpish military science fiction series, the author does a pretty good job of showing the emotional impact of war on the individual. All of the Hammer's Slammers series is worth reading, especially for those who want to understand war and the individual. Drake's experiences lend an authority to his work that other writers of military sci-fi are missing.
David Drake has a unique position to comment on what its like to fight in a war, given he is a Vietnam veteran. These stories are fantastic science fiction, and often leave you with a realization that war often isn't simple, or fair.
I've had a soft spot for the world of Hammer's Slammers for a long time, and it's good for my inner completeist to know that I'm going to be able to read all of it that's been written.
Collection of longer stories/novellas than in Volume 1. Each one focuses more on a few individuals within the Slammers rather than trying to cover a whole army. This means the characters really come through in each story.
There's a lot of combat, Drake describes the action well. There's some explanation of why they've been hired for each particular battle, but sometimes it's just the bare bones as the main character understands it.