I purchased Gladiator as part of a three book bundle: Women of the United Federation Marines. So Amazon might not credit me with "Verified Purchase". And I just had a chance to read the actual blurb for this novel, and concede that it works better than my own effort. Nevertheless I hope your will stick with this to the end.
A war where only female combatants can protect humanity from total destruction.
Engaging concept: Humanity has staved off the total destruction of all of its settled planets and populations at the hands of the Klethos race by accepting one-on-one trial-by-combat fights to the death against their d’relle queens to determine whether or not the Klethos will allow humanity to retain, or be forced to abandon, a specific planet –
The Klethos select a planet with human inhabitants, and issue a challenge. A single d’relle queen will fight a single member (who must be a female) of the United Federation Marines. Weapons are allowed, but they are limited to basic hand weapons such as knives, swords, or clubs (i.e. a medieval mace…) The fight is to the death of one combatant. If the Klethos warrior wins, humanity get a day or so to remove every inhabitant of that planet. Failure results in the death of any who remain on the planet after the deadline. If the human warrior wins, the Klethos will spare that planet.
Brazee has created an original, complex, and logically consistent universe, and step-by-step reveals what is involved for every young woman who volunteers to serve as a “gladiator”. These women are the best of the best. Soldiers of integrity and courage undergo genetic modification and training, with the clear understanding that even if they are victorious once, or maybe twice in actual combat, the process will kill them within five years even if they are never chosen to participate in battle with a d’relle queen.
Be advised that as a reader, you will care deeply about every aspect of every character you are introduced to during the course of Gladiator.
Several years ago, I came across the author Michael R. Hicks, and his “In Her Name” set of three trilogies. A common thread throughout the nine novels was the idea of single combat between male or female human warriors and a race of aliens with technology that humans can barely comprehend, and certainly cannot defeat. All members of this race who are in contact with humans are female. And Hicks, though he doesn’t work within a military structure as does Brazee, has built a massive fully-realized universe, populated with characters you will also care deeply about, that will resonate with what Brazee has done with his Women of the United Federation Marines Trilogy. Start with Hicks’ First Contact, and then kick yourself for not having purchased the first trilogy as a bundle, and saved yourself some money you now have to use to get the next two books in the trilogy.