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The Outer Edge

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359 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 1, 2014

2 people want to read

About the author

Patrick G. Cox

27 books78 followers
Patrick Gray Cox has had a long fascination with the sea and ships, as well as the world of science fiction and space travel. Born in Cape Town and educated at Selborne College in East London, South Africa, Patrick is a published technical author and lecturer, and a retired firefighter after thirty-six years of soot, heat, blood, sweat, and laughter. He is a Licensed Minister in the Church of England and has three adult children and three grandchildren of whom he is enormously proud.
He has a number of published articles in trade journals and continues to write in a freelance capacity for the Fire and Rescue Journal among others. His portfolio includes a large number of commissioned articles on fire service matters, a book on Marine Fire Studies and the editing of a handbook for the NEBOSH Certificate in Fire Risk Management. His technical books include the IFE Guide to Fire Investigation published in 2011 and The Fire Service Leader’s Pocket Book published in 2017. He has appeared on television programmes in the past as a fire-fighting expert including Ring of Fire for the Discovery Channel about fighting bush fires in Australia, and he had a similar role as a commentator on Inside Spontaneous Human Combustion in 2005 for Sky1.
His popular historical romance, A Baltic Affair, is set in the latter stages of the Napoleonic Wars in the Baltic area against the background of Napoleon's attempt to strangle British trade with its Northern European allies, the repercussions of which still echo down the years.
Limehouse Boys takes readers to the grimy, gritty streets of the East End of London in the 1830s and follows the struggles of three orphans caught up in a web of crime, corruption in high places and poverty. With the help of friends among the watermen of the river, they find a niche in which they can change the fate intended for them by those with money and power.
Magnus Patricius: The Remarkable Life of St Patrick the Man, is a fictionalised biography of St Patrick, one of his heroes. Preparation to write this tribute work to the saint took much time and involved reading a very wide range of matters related to the period in which St Patrick lived, the events he would have witnessed, the cultures, the peoples, and of course, as many academic studies of the man and his work he could access. While only two documents survive that are authenticated as being the words of Patrick himself, these are supplemented by a veritable library of other works believed by many to be either based upon or inspired by Patrick's own writings.
Harry Heron: Midshipman's Journey, is the flagship book in the Harry Heron Adventure Series. Entirely a work of 19th century British naval fiction, this coming-of-age story follows the career of Midshipman Harry Nelson-Heron and his friends Ferghal O’Connor and Danny Gunn aboard the 74-gun HMS Spartan on a voyage to Australia and the East.
Harry Heron: Into the Unknown, the second book in the series, captures the exciting action as Harry, Ferghal and Danny are accidentally propelled through a time warp four hundred years into the future from 1804 to 2204. Through wits, skill and intelligence, they quickly assimilate into the North European Confederation Fleet and adapt to the world of spaceships and colonies on distant planets.
Harry Heron: No Quarter captures Harry and Ferghal’s adventures and challenges in Fleet College and their early days as newly commissioned Midshipmen.
Harry Heron: Savage Fugitive finds Harry and his friends fighting to survive on the alien world Lycania while on the run from the Consortium.
The final two books in the series, Harry Heron: Awakening Threat, and Harry Heron: Hope Transcends, have now been joined by the Prequel, Captain James Heron First Into the Fray and Conflict in Shadow.

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Profile Image for Andrew Ian  Dodge.
6 reviews13 followers
March 7, 2014
The Outer Edge is the latest Harry Heron novel from Patrick Cox. Cox continues to hone his craft and convince me that time-travel novels do not have to be po-faced rubbish. The brothers from the past continue to battle with their colleagues and the chaos of space travel. This time they have stumbled on aliens whose intentions are not exactly just.

Despite the fact that Heron continues to prove his worth to the fleet, there are those that undermine him. This time we have a subtle jab, delivered by the means of a pedantic doctor, at a few tropes of the Star Trek universe. As a Trekoloather I was pleased to see the “Prime Directive” be mocked in such a manner.

As with his last few novels, Cox has created quite the page turner that is just ripe for reading in one or two sittings. It is, as are the rest of the series, the perfect airplane novel that you can’t yet get in the airport. I read it in ebook form, and it is just perfect in that format. This is no doubt partly due to the subject at hand.

If you like science fiction that is somewhere between the hard and pulp variety then you owe yourself to pick this book up as well as the rest of the series. These books stand alone well on their own rather well, however.

And, as with the last one of Heron’s adventures, I look forward to the next outing. Why, oh why, can’t some visionary director pick this series up for TV (or Netflix?). It is time we had a good original space romp and the Heron series fits the bill nicely. While it might not be Firefly, it is fine ole’ yarn that keeps me coming back for more.
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