Tattered shreds of dreams clung to his awareness, already slipping away into emptiness. There were dreams of falling, of flame and battle and death in the night, and of an endless, empty gulf between the stars…
Bad guys flying golden spaceships? Stargates? The Hunters Of The Dawn? Yes please!
Battlespace is the second book in The Legacy Trilogy (which, again, is the second of three trilogies comprising the Marines In Space series). I haven’t been reading the trilogies in order (I jumped right into Legacy and it’s working out fine for me). In fact, these books are so loosely linked you can probably read each as a standalone in any case.
The novel doesn’t get off to the quickest start, given the fact that this is Military Sci-Fi through-and-through. The reason, of course, is because the author incorporates a lot of detail regarding preparation and planning of operations, as well as training, into his story, before actual deployment. Not too much harm done, though, and once things got going, I was glued to the pages. The nice thing about this particular instalment was that there wasn’t a lot of violence action just for violence’s action’s sake’; everything is planned and executed within context of the story, giving it an edge (of some gravitas) compared to some of the lesser restrained works out there, in this specific genre. The author clearly knows what he’s on about. What’s more: the characters are fairly endearing for the most part, even though the point of view shifts too often to ensure complete character development (the story is told from perspectives ranging from high rank (strategic) to medium rank (tactical) to, well, grunt-level (down and dirty)).
In the end Battlespace was pretty much exactly what I expected. A solid Military Science Fiction novel, with no real surprises. Competently executed, rather than spectacularly, but fans of the genre should find much to enjoy here. I especially enjoyed the way the author weaves some mythology elements into his story (in this case: the “Nommo”). It’s a visual enough novel, with some elements of wonder.
In closing:
I always enjoy stories that address the Fermi Paradox. In this instance the author postulates that there is nobody there because everyone is exterminated. This isn’t new; many, many authors have come up with this concept, but Douglas does link it directly to Fermi’s Paradox:
“Where the hell is everyone?”
The Predatory Survivors Hypothesis simply stated that, in Darwinian terms, one possible survival strategy for any intelligent species was to eliminate all possible competition. If, at some point in the history of galactic civilization, some one species that had evolved to sentience through this strategy had developed star travel, it might continue with that strategy, finding and destroying races of beings that might one day challenge it.
3.5 stars – rounded up