Secrets have been unleashed. Worlds have fallen. A Mage-King has died. But the war rages on!
Secrets and warships combined to turn the tide of the Siege of Legatus, delivering the capital of the Republic of Faith and Reason into the hands of their enemies. With Damien Montgomery called away to lead the entire Protectorate of Mars, fighting the war falls to Mage-Admiral Jane Alexander and Mage-Lieutenant Roslyn Chambers. As the Martian Second Fleet moves against the remaining Republic worlds, Captain Kelly LaMonte’s covert stealth ship sweeps the worlds away from the conflict, searching for the Republic’s government-in-hiding and a chance to end the bloody conflict.
But this war began in the shadows, and the secrets hidden in those shadows threaten to turn the tide of the war once more—and bring it to the heart of the Protectorate!
Glynn Stewart is the author of over 60 books, including Starship’s Mage, a bestselling science fiction and fantasy series where faster-than-light travel is possible–but only because of magic.
Writing managed to liberate Glynn from a bleak future as an accountant. With his personality and hope for a high-tech future intact, he lives in Southern Ontario with his partner, their cats, and an unstoppable writing habit.
Let me start by saying that I really did genuinely love this book, as with all the Starship's Mage series thus far...however I really do want to ask and hope that perhaps with the next trilogy in this series, we focus back in a little more on our titular "Starship's Mage"...I get that the world is filled with rich and excellent characters, but honestly Damien is basically just a side-note in this volume, and hasn't done anything meaningful since the hands-incident...If we want a series about Jane, or any of the other secondary characters, lets split them off in the same manner as the other titles in this shared universe and perhaps give Damien back a little of the spotlight again.
Not wishing to give away any spoilers, but what happens in chapter 17 was so telegraphed, when it happened I was just stunned the author had actually gone through with it. It’s really a rehash of previous plots and implies that not one of the main characters have learnt a thing during the previous eight books. The useful thing to come out of that particular storyline is it provided some opportunities for some interesting moments with Roslyn. I have developed a sort of ‘love hate’ relationship with this series that always makes it difficult to rate the books. There are elements of the stories I like, but there nearly always seems to be something that also really irritates me about the books. If possible I would have given 2.5 stars.
5/10:Finished the book and it was about average for me.
I was sure I had some quotes highlighted to use in this review, but they don't seem to have come through on Goodreads. Anyhoo...this book.
This book, unfortunately, didn't hold my attention like the previous ones in the series. Mainly because there wasn't enough Damien Montgomery in it. I guess the cover gave that away (oh, and the blurb). But still, I held out hope for Damien, because, let's face it, he's the reason why I read this series.
Instead, we got a lot of Kelly Lamonte on Rhapsody in Blue (Purple? I can't remember) and her two spouses. I actually skipped her parts.
Mage-Admiral Jane Alexander and Mage-Lieutenant Roslyn Chambers were kind of inetresting, and I stopped skipping their parts early on.
I guess, this one just didn't do much for me. I missed Damien. I missed quotes like "I speak for Mars. Will you listen?" And I just wasn't into the girls that much.
I will read the next, especially if it looks like Damien is back in form again. Fingers crossed.
I received an ARC for free in exchange for an honest review...
..and once again I am honestly READY FOR MORE.
If I had to rate my favorite worlds of Glynn's, I wouldn't be able to do it. Characters? Definitely forget it. YET something with Roslyn Chambers resonates with me. She has advanced quickly, but not from lack of skill/merit/grit. It's impossible to not root for her.
This book had classic Glynn Stewart plot twists, the ones we all know and love - you know they're coming yet they still slap you in the face. I'm always a fan of surprises. I was not let down.
The pace of this novel was brisk but not too fast. I felt like I got a lot of content out of it without ever wanting to put it down (unfortunately my lunch breaks are not long enough! I may have to start taking vacation days for Glynn's releases...)
If you're new to the Starship's Mage series, do yourself a HUGE favor and start at book 1. This series is 100% worth savoring from the beginning.
This could have been a much better book, but it's infection with contemporary gender politics makes it near impossible to suspend disbelief. In a nutshell, Roslyn and Admiral Alexander get kidnapped and in the end Roslyn is able to break them both and escape back to the Protectorate. The scenes with Kelly Lamonte are really slow and kill the pacing of the book.
Things that really get under my skin: 1) When the series started, there was a good balance of genders. However, as the series has expanded, nearly EVERY new character is female: starship officers, marines, bureaucrats, etc. When a male character does pop up, it's either a villain or meek subordinate.
2) Inconsistency. The Republic was defined in the other books as being supremely capable and downright scary in their preparation and planning. In this book, you'd think they were all mentally deficient morons. There are scenes where the Republic is trying to turn Roslyn, but their efforts are weak and childish. They don't have 100% camera coverage on someone that marked as a threat and that allows her to easily escape her room.
3) The rampant Mary Sueism. Early in the book, Rosyln is able to physically overpower a male Augment. The Augments were previously described as being highly trained and near impossible to stop without distance or overwhelming force. She's able to kick his knee with her bare foot, throat punch him, and then run away. She even later says she's only had basic self-defense training. We're to expect an unarmed, barely clothed woman overpowers a cyborg twice her size. Sorry, no. That's effin' ridiculous.
There's a scene near the end where she's able to pop the weld in a wall by smacking it with a chair. Again, No. While a weld is typically a weak point, they're still strong. a 140 pound person is not going to be able to generate the force to come close to damaging it.
This is pretty much the end of the Damien Montgomery stories and the beginning of the Roslyn Chambers as the primary protagonist of the series. This is a controversial change and I, honestly, kind of wish that Damien hadn't been taken out of the central role. Roslyn is a fine character but I feel like switching protagonists is a mistake. Still, I enjoyed the story of kidnapping and escape with Legatus trying to rebuild its forces like the First Order from Star Wars. Thankfully, Roslyn and Kelly Lamonte aren't about to let them come back with a new empire. If you've gotten this far in the series, you're probably not going to back out now. I do think they made magic a bit TOO powerful this time, though.
Eh took me forever to finish this one. I am just not a huge fan of book series practically excluding the main characters in favor of secondary ones after investing so much into the main one.
I hope the next ones get back to Damien.......this just felt like a filler episode.
I liked the series but there are many missing elements in the world building. The internal social, political and economic life of the various interstellar societies are a complete blank. The only picture in my mind from the first book on is the default Neoliberal narrative of the present. The little people are absent.
What decision makers decide is presented as a society wide consensus. Among other issues are the many lost stories of the people who make life possible. They build power plants. They build space ships. They staff schools and hospitals. The books in the series like those of other writers are picturing only the surface of populations, which makes a simpler but not more exciting story line.
From commenters on Powers of the Earth, I discovered that I am not smart, my working class background is shameful, I need to get a life, that slavery is a social good and should be restarted (funny that, it still exists), that existentialism is the root of National Socialist thought, Ted Kennedy is a Mount Rushmore Face. The writer of Powers and Claes Rees Jr cgr710 are quite the scholars. 🤗🤗
I almost asked them about the origins of the Bronze Age Collapse and the solution to the problem of Quantum Mechanics versus General Relativity (please do not judge, I am not the only person obsessed with those answers). I reconsidered as I thought it better that they generate an opinion of the book but they never did. 😀
With Goodreads having masked commenter ID's and not responding to my queries over more than 2 years 🤔, I have closed my pages. The months long ordeal around my first review of Powers of the Earth, forced me to remove all the little lurkers. Only one remains. Goodreads will not allow me to remove Dr Susan Hamilton (a Maths professor at the University of Tennessee ?). 🤔
She posted nothing over more than 2 years since her friend request and has not removed me despite four requests. I hope that she is not that desperate for friends because I am the least interesting person that I know. 🙂
Even if I were interesting, you really should communicate or it begins to feel stalker-y. Perhaps a colleague will share that social convention with her. Enough of that and her.😁
It seems to be true that when you write a detailed negative review of a "silly, sorry badly written piece of libertarian shite", suddenly being a communist is a bad thing. Who knew. 😊
For more Goodreads, see my review of "Capital Starship", a boom-boom spacey-space book or Powers of the Earth (a silly, sorry, badly written piece of libertarian shite) and the comments from a Class Rees, Jr/cgr710 (a self-identified NeoNazi and US patriot).
Should that not be a contradiction? 🙂
Claes Rees, Jr/cgr710 Don't be a numpty. Be a smarty. Come and join the Communist Party.
I wonder sometimes why US patriots (Tucker Carlson, Claes Rees Jr/cgr710 or the US Republican Party) are so vocal in support of Putin and Russia even after his threatening the USA with nuclear war. I thought it was just the gold but then seeing the reports of the rape of very young girls seeming to be a perk of the Russian army, that might be the real draw. In any case.
GLORY TO UKRAINE !!! and GLORY TO THE HEROES !!!
Throughout the series, there is a sense that as in an american sitcom, the society (which is obviously capitalist) has no Internal issues with its labor force, wealth determining internal and external policies, social welfare, class divisions or ethnic/gender/human rights restrictions.
Given the atrocities that allowed the creation of mages, there is a serious problem with Earth's population. The more horrible murder of thousands of mages including children over years, suggests even sicker populations in the anti-mage stellar coalition. 😐
These societies are all presented as Hollywood perfect. The problem I have is that since its beginnings, capitalism has depended upon massive poverty to function. There is no history of a long hard struggle of companies and corporations to increase their workers' wages, improve workers' health and safety, upgrade the education of the general populace, eradicate the tenement communities, guarantee availability of free clean water, free energy, free healthcare and higher education or guaranteed housing in the present day. 🤔
There is also no explanation for how the perfect societies suggested by the series evolved. 🤔
There are some channels that might stimulate the imagination when creating a society. Mia Mulder, Lindsay Ellis, Sabine Hossenfelder, Munecat, Quinn's Ideas, Vlad Vexler, Brandon F, Sarah Z are a few. Spend a week or three with some of their content and they raise questions and explore some of the answers to those questions. 🙂🙂
They are humorous, knowledgeable, bring depth to their subjects. They always present good overviews and encourage further reading. we can never escape the reading but with their help, it needn't be tedious. 😊
From government through corporate media and education the explanation for the lack of the above is never the result of policies that maintain and increase the wealth of the wealthy. Any degradation of the living standards never has any bearing upon the wealth of the nation. Current economic reporting ignores the condition of average citizens. When acknowledged, It is always the fault of the worker not the economic system which forces these negative policies. 🤔
These wonderful societies allow the murder of many thousands of children and adults for brain harvesting, yet no one knew? The crews of the ships, the engineers who maintained the brains, the engineers and builders who designed and built the ships, the personnel tasked with tracking adults and children, no parents noticed that there children were disappeared and other mages joined in the murdering but none were aware of anything wrong. 🤔
These brilliant societies after the great "revelation" still supported the people who created that atrocity or said "I'm sorry" and all is forgiven. The fruit has a lovely shape and color, pay no attention to the rot beneath the surface. 🤔
The positive of this series is that the writer does know his way around the english language. It's not award winning but it meets the standards of general fiction. That is award winning when compared to almost all of current US science fiction, for which I am grateful to Canadian education (too lazy to look but I believe the writer is Canadian).
With his books being the best of the current sub top tier science fiction writers, I have lost interest in current science fiction. The streaming services have a more entertaining science fiction product than the print. At the worst, it represents a ninety minute investment for a film and is still generally better written, flaws and all. Netflix also has a large multinational selection which is interesting, at least when not dubbed. 🙂
After belatedly accepting that Goodreads are awful as a readers' site, rather than just a cheesy sales platform for Amazon, I discovered YouTube's book channels. 😍😍
The community caters to all the interests of bibliophiles, from general fiction reviews to library organization. The reader communities are excited about books, are less parochial and are more demanding of its fiction. I recommend to any reader a visit to several book channels, some of which I've listed below. 🙂
I was also introduced to the dedicated documentary sites through advertisements on YouTube channels. I began with Curiosity Stream/Nebula at a cost of about $15 USD for a yearly subscription. I think that they are all worth a look.
My picks of the moment. Mia Mulder, AlysOtherLife, Diane Morgan, Tom Nicholas, The Shades of Orange, Paleo Analysis, Owen Jones, Chloe Stafler, Stevie Emerson, Novara Media, Some More News, Alice Cappelle, Then & Now.
As for Goodreads, please consider treating this site as potentially hostile. 😐
Ominous music begins. Minimize profile information, remove all lurkers, screenshot the odd and ugly are good ideas. Ominous music ends. 🙂
Seriously, protect yourself. May we all find Good Reading. 😊
Some of my favorite YouTube channels are.
Ship Happens, Munecat, Novara Media, Some More News, Tara Mooknee, Diane Morgan, Owen Jones, Philosophy Tube, The Mindful Narrowboat, Sort of Interesting, Tiny Wee Boat, Real Crusades History, Books with Chloe, Sabine Hossenfelder, Fiction Beast, Alt Shift X, Big Think, Violet Orlandi, The Piano Boat, Spacedock, What Vivi did next, Autumn's Boutique, Between the Wars, The Great War, The Templin Institute, Real Engineering, Scott Manley, Tibees, A Life of Lit, Lilly's expat life, I'm Rosa, Kidology, Ana Psychology, Apostolic Majesty, Paleo Analysis, Propaganda Talks, Then & Now, Tom Nicholas, Lady of the Library, Mala Armia Janosika, Quinn's Ideas, Chugging Along, Cruising the Cut, Sarah Z, Chloe Stafler, Merphy Napier, Practical Engineering, Overly Sarcastic Productions, The Juice Media, Ryan Chapman, Lady knight the Brave, Prime of Midlife, Northern Narrowboaters, The Armchair Historian, The Historian's Craft, Cruising Alba, Second Thought, The Gravel Institute, Eleanor Morton, Kalaripayattu, Pentatonix, Depressed Russian, Natasha's Adventures, Books with Emily Fox, Austin McConnell, Adult Wednesday Addams, Jabzy, IzzzYzzz, Dr Becky, Crecganford, BrandonF, TIKHistory, Natalia Tsarikova, 3Blue 1Brown, Sorelle Amore Finance, Oliver Lugg, Awful Archeology, History Marche, Geography Geek, Hello Future Me, May Moon Narrowboat Kathy's Flog in France, The Library Ladder, Emmie, Zoe Baker, Diane Callahan Quotidian Writer, We're in Hell, Make Better Media, Up and Atom, JamCam and Cam, Digital Engine, Ben and Emily, Cecilia Blomdahl, Pro Robotics, Book Odyssey, A Clockwork Reader, Noah Samsen, Jean's Thoughts.
I wish you a sunny morning, a glorious afternoon, a splendid evening, a pleasant night and may we all keep learning.
Genocide and enslavement on a global scale is a small price to pay for progress. Adolph Hitler
This is a hard one to rate. The pacing was inconsistent and the first half of the book was mostly starship gun porn (which I find excruciatingly boring). The ending was abrupt and while not a cliff hanger it did feel to me like a wish to get it done and get it published.
The middle, however, was excellent. Engaging, exciting, and unexpected.
So, some good and some that left me thinking "please get me through this." I guess the fact that it took me a month to get it read is the clue.
A shift away from Mars makes for a nice change of pace and yet another fast-paced read from Stewart. Now that I'm caught up with main series I've disappointed I'll have to wait for the next book.
Basically nothing about this book is believable. You have entire plot points copied from the previous books, combined with the fact that the Protectorate is probably the most incompetent empire in the history of the universe. The "plot twist" around the middle of the book comes so out of nowhere that its the exact opposite of a Deus Ex Machina.
I'm so disappointed because this series used to be good, but it feels like the author is just milking it for money now. This book boils down to "how can I write a book about things going in circles with previous plot twists from other books in the series." For that to happen every single plot point needs the Protectorate to be stupid, naive, lacking intelligence and overall incompetent. It was not a fun read, its an exercise on how to not write a book. Not only I didn't like the book but it also killed whatever rest of joy I had reading this series.
Well written, but a 4 for me; it loses a star as I read these books for Damien, not for the ancillary characters. Very little of him here, as this is Roslyn and Kelly's show. Sometimes I find a main sequence character/storyline that I like, but the "sidequests" and spin-offs just don't catch my attention the same way. This series seems to have lost the balance it seemed to have had earlier and has wandered away from what attracted me to it.
I notice a trend in the author's work that headlines the female characters and marginalizes the male ones. In this book, most of the male characters are villains or at least obstructive, while the women all save the day. This is a legitimate artistic choice, but a lack of balance is a lack of balance regardless of social justice cant.
That said, much as women (or whoever else these days) feel "marginalized" if they don't have good characters in books/movies, I start to lose interest when there are no solid male characters. That is neither "right" nor "wrong", it's just how things are. I'm not going to boycott anything or raise a stink on social media, I just won't read/watch it. If this is the way this series continues, well, I have other things I can read.
I loved this book as I did all the other ones. We didn't see a lot of Damian which is bad but we did see more of Jane and Rosalyn. I won't spoil the book but I think it spends to much time on "B plot". And I don't think this is a book that affects the major plot of the series. I think 95% of the story isn't important and has no impact of the bigger picture, the war. If you skipped this book I don't think you would miss much. But it was a great read. And very enjoyable but it might not be necessary. I hope the next book either expands on the war more or brings more of Damian.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Good solid scifi action, which makes it difficult to talk about without spoilers.
That said, I know it's a Futureama joke that spaceships can handle anywhere from 0 to 1 atmospheres, but seriously if the ship is armored to protect against high energy weapons fire and debris collisions, it should be able to survive quite a bit of pressure. Gravity or air fiction should have been the real issue.
The Service of Mars should have been classified as a different series, as it is effectively a spin-off with a new main character augmented by some returning cast members. As it doesn't telegraph this, I suspect a lot of readers will be disappointed due to a lack of Damien Montgomery.
Personally, I was expecting that Damien would end up as a side-character, and was unsurprised when it became clear that scenes with him would be as rare as those from the Mage-King himself. Instead, we return to the frontlines of the War, which was put on hold in the previous novel. It's not a jarring transition since the cast is almost equivalent to Sword of Mars, with the crew of Rhapsody in Purple returning, as well as the Admiral and her flag staff in Second Fleet. Basically if you liked Sword of Mars, you shouldn't dislike this book because there is one less Hand on the spy ship.
Now that I've finished defending the shift in main characters, I'll return to an actual review of the novel. The plot itself is just as thrilling as ever, with the Republic as sneaky as before and the Protectorate straddling the line between highly competent but constantly getting stabbed in the back. I think we come out just right... the Protectorate doesn't feel like it's too stupid to survive, but just barely. Suspense is ratcheted way up, as while I know Damien won't be killed, I have no assurances for the rest of the cast. I feared for the lives of quite a few of the main characters.
That said, The Service of Mars just isn't quite up to the standards of the previous books. The Republic is not enough of a threat, and worse, the story moved on to other matters in Mountain of Mars. And finally... the new characters just aren't Damien.
Recommended, but have your expectations set correctly.
Not quite 4 stars because it seems a bit too easy for Roslyn to escape from the enemy's stronghold. Nevertheless, it was action packed, albeit a bit too much time spent on the space battles at the beginning.
Roslyn is still working as aide to Jane Alexander on a mission to re-capture another breakaway planet. The planetary government wanted Jane on world for the surrendering ceremony and Roslyn tagged along. On the way back to their shuttle, Jane and Roslyn are kidnapped by their fake protection unit and taken to the Republic's stronghold. It was reported that they were killed in another shuttle accident. Instead, they were put into cells that nullified their magic and efforts were made to convert Roslyn to the Republic.
In the meantime, Stealth ship Captain Kelly LaMonte raises her suspicions to Damien that the Republic might have a stronghold inside the Protectorate and it might be in one of the three unArcana planets that did not secede. Damien gives her permission to investigate and also that he doesn't believe in another shuttle accident.
The finale is suitably exciting and we get to see what Jane Alexander is capable of. Although I sometimes wonder if the Rune Wrights are so powerful, why do they even need a battle fleet to fight their enemies?
It'll be interesting to see where the author takes the series next.
Another good book in the starship mage series. This time covering more than just Damien, we see more of the royal family and damiens protegy.
Although Damien is still a good part of this book, I enjoyed the other characters getting to have their own stories.
Slight irritations which I now see throughout the series are here again.. the fact that the author reuses introduction paragraphs about the simulacrum and some characters. How many times do we need to read that hthe Marie second in command has a silly smile that makes people underestimate his intelligence. Or that the author refuses to pick something other than their 'dark skin' as a trait to describe some characters! I assume he is trying to be inclusive, but it reads oddly.
However this series still continues to introduce some different elements to most sci-fi books and the plot is moving along.so i would still recommend this series.
Pretty disappointed, not that it was bad, but it was basically the story of all the side characters taking center stage and not all that interesting really. There is a war going on, but the character we all have followed throughout this series doesn't appear until about the 40% mark, probably is featured in less than 10% of the entire story and has basically become the briefly mentioned Mage King like the other character of the same name throughout the entire series. The story advances and is still decent, but it's become a bit like one of those series where the main character has grown old or died off and continues with the descendants or whatever happens after the original character is no longer around. could still be good but not really interested anymore at this point.
I’m bowing out of this book early because it barely includes the main character in this series. I’ve spent the last eight books growing attached to Damien and I’m just not interested in the side characters anywhere near as much as I am in him.
As a result of following characters I have only a small amount of interest in, this book failed to hold my attention. I am not the biggest fan of military fiction anyway because I am a character driven reader. The best military fiction books are those that focus on the characters so that the stakes of war feel real. The characters we follow in this book we barely know until this point so the stakes just aren’t there for me.
I hope I can read a good summary of this somewhere before the next book comes out so that I can pick up this series again in the future, but I’m wondering if maybe this might be the end of my journey with the starships mage.
The story that started with Starship’s Mage, with the rise of Damien Montgomery ended in book 8.
This is the close out of the war. This is a book of the Protectorate of Mars, and if the series was about that, then I wouldn’t be as disappointed as I am. I wanted one last adventure with Damien, where he got the closure he deserved, but his near retirement as vizier seems to be his ending. And it is a good ending, but it wasn’t satisfactory for me.
Now stepping away from that, the story is a good military sci fi story focusing on secondary characters while light touching on overarching plot points that will probably head into the next series.
Which yes, I will read. Stewart writes entertainingly. But I won’t pretend to not want something else more for the close out of this book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The first 30% I had difficulty to Damien not being the character central to the story. It was The Queen Mage Admiral and a secondary character from prior stories. But, once I reset my expectations, I realized I was reading a very good story, with great characters, political ideals at war, large battles, small fights, and the potential defeat of Mars. Still when a captured mage follows her belief in her responsibility, getting the job done and accomplishes great things it makes me want to keep reading, Despite only a cameo by Damien, it was a well-done story in the continuation of this series.
At the end, there is a promise of book 10. We still await more about the aliens.
For a starship mage book, there's not a lot of our titular starship mage.
But serious: This book (and most of Stewart's) are exactly what I need to help get through this pandemic. These aren't intended to be great.
These novels are all exactly what they should be: competent protagonists who put their lives at jeopardy for the sake of duty. The dialogue-speeches about duty and honor often bring tears to my eyes. I really like that Stewart is so clearly trying to have woke politics throughout his fiction, and to show that everyone has a story.
I enjoy them. They are feel good. This one is exactly in that mold.
This focused on the main story but not from the perspective of our diminutive Darth. There are a few gaping (almost comically large) plot holes/ leaps of logic in this book and that makes the plot seems just....less polished then other books. Like in order for the main plot to happen there us major hand waving of what I would understand to be basic code clearance and protocols needed in any military organization let alone this scifi advanced society' military organization....oh well 3 out of 5. Hope the next one reads less like a kids adventure book.
It honestly felt like all the characters in the story were dumbed down by like 100%. There’s only so many times where an author can pull the old “somehow the enemy is even stronger then we last thought, even though we’ve been working so hard and improved so much”. It’s like four books in a row now or somehow the enemy is even stronger and even more conniving than before and somehow seems to have unlimited resources and unlimited time and outplay is the good guys time and time again. On top of that, some of the plot choices just felt like they were completely out of sync with previously established in universe lore. The book equivalent of “ somehow Palpatine returned”
I received an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
This was a wonderful addition to the series. As promised, the book focused on Mage-Lieutenant Roslyn Chambers and Captain Kelly LaMonte. Both were important characters from earlier in the series and they did a great job carrying the story. The book started wrapping up the war and introduced more hints to the origins of the mages. Without spoiling anything, I can't say more, but I look forward to seeing what happens next and eagerly await for the next book.
This book was a little bit of a slower start for me. Not having Damien as a central character in this story made it a little harder for me to get into, but after about half of the novel, the branching storylines started to merge together and things got exciting, fast. It was hard to put down toward the end and some characters who have been aside characters until now got some real depth.
Overall I very much enjoyed the story and where things are going in it, I'm hoping for more stories and more of Damien specifically!
I loved this instalment. It had everything, suspense, drama - I could not put it down. I finished it in a day. I don't know how Glynn does it. The description of the battles, the tech - I could picture everything in my mind. I hope there is more to come......I think with the mention of the aliens it's a hint there will be more. Before I read this book, I re read the whole series again to refresh my memory of the story line......this is the 3rd re read for me, I just can't get enough. Great story!!!!