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In charge of an old cargo spaceship, the Old Captain Orbus flees a violent and sadistic past, but he doesn't know that the lethal war drone, Sniper, is a stowaway, and that the past is rapidly catching up with him. His old enemy the Prador Vrell, mutated by the Spatterjay virus into something powerful and dangerous, has seized control of a Prador dreadnought, murdering its crew, and is now seeking to exact vengeance on those who tried to have him killed. Their courses inexorably converge in the Graveyard, the border realm lying between the Polity and the Prador Kingdom, a place filled with the ruins left by past genocides and interplanetary war. But this is the home of the Golgoloth, monster to a race of monsters, the place where a centuries-long cold war is being fought. Meanwhile, the terrifying Prador King is coming, prepared to do anything to ensure Vrell's death and keep certain deadly secrets buried ...and somewhere out there something that has annihilated civilizations is stirring from a slumber of five million years. The cold war is heating up, fast.

437 pages, Hardcover

First published April 9, 2009

99 people are currently reading
1213 people want to read

About the author

Neal Asher

139 books3,063 followers
I’ve been an engineer, barman, skip lorry driver, coalman, boat window manufacturer, contract grass cutter and builder. Now I write science fiction books, and am slowly getting over the feeling that someone is going to find me out, and can call myself a writer without wincing and ducking my head. As professions go, I prefer this one: I don’t have to clock-in, change my clothes after work, nor scrub sensitive parts of my body with detergent. I think I’ll hang around.

Source: http://www.blogger.com/profile/139339...

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 131 reviews
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,865 followers
March 25, 2019
As always, I'm surprised at how much I am eventually able to get into the psychology and biology and all the weirdness of the Prador aliens. I vacillate between annoyance and fascination.

Fortunately, I got into this by the end. Spatterjay's humble beginnings become very clear and the whole ultimate always-alive always-eating neverending replenishing food supply of everything on the planet, alive even as they're digested... or we are all digested, transforming, never dying... becomes clear at last.

No spoilers, but we've met the big bad before. :)

What we have here is a huge throwdown between different Prador factions including a handful of Polity peeps and the absolutely fantastic Sniper, the AI war drone. The interactions going on here made this novel a good deal better than average. :)

BUT, I will say that aside from the great end, the rest of the novel had quite a few dull parts. On the whole, I enjoyed it and the cool end made up for a ton of evils. Solid novel wrapping up Spatterjay. Better than the last, I think, but not quite as good as the first in the trilogy. I'm happy enough. :)
Profile Image for Veronika Sebechlebská.
381 reviews139 followers
May 15, 2022
Toto je kniha, v ktorej obrovské zmutované mimozemské pavúky bojujú proti obrovským zombie zmutovaným mimozemským pavúkom a tiež proti obrovským zombie zmutovaným mimozemským pavúkom, ktoré ďalej mutovali až domutovali do niečoho, z čoho sa i priemernéhému obrovskému zmutovanému mimozemského pavúkovi zježia chlpy na nohách - a takto zmutované, bojujú proti všetkým ostatným mimozemským pavúkom, zombie či nezombie, teda asi, je totiž možné, že niektoré nuansy tohto komplexného a mnohovrstevného príbehu mi predsa len unikli takže si to budem musieť prečítať znovu, na čo sa už teraz nesmierne teším.
Profile Image for Lee.
351 reviews227 followers
May 24, 2015
I have to say that I am done with Spatterjay. This one tipped the balance where I no longer care about what happens in this story. It was all a bit too much. I feel like I read a story about one continuous long battle with high tech weaponry. It just didn't take a break and try to develop a story. It felt like it was a battle wrapped around some characters that were exactly the same as the previous books.
So that's me done with Spatterjay.
Profile Image for Bryan Brown.
269 reviews9 followers
June 23, 2019
Well at least it was not pirate ship stories like the other spatterjay novels. This one is back to space where it belongs. I was jolted out by multiple pop culture references that make no sense in context. Otherwise it was a decent read but I’m glad to move on from Spatterjay.
Profile Image for Chris Berko.
484 reviews145 followers
May 31, 2016
I loved this one, maybe my favorite Spatterjay novel.
101 reviews7 followers
November 11, 2025
Perhaps the last truly excellent book by Neal Asher.

The big negative or criticism I have of his books after this one is that its very samey, in that the plot of his stories are the plan of one AI or entity (spoilers, kind of). This worked once for a series of books he did in the past, and even then everything you read that happened wasn't preordained or planned out by one thing. But since 2010 EVERYTHING is, and that for me spoils the books.

Orbus, however, isn't like that. There are characters that are powerful and intelligent, but they individually have parts of the puzzle, not all of it, so when pieces get put together there are surprises and tension and real stakes in that things could end up in destruction and death for all concerned. The characters are great, Orbus is the main character, and he has a real arc, he grows and changes, which is excellent. Sniper the war drone is back, as quippy and sarcastic as ever. Vrell has a massive part to play and has a great overall arc too. New characters such as the Golgolgoth, and the king of the prador are scary and menacing and though alien there goals and objectives are clear.

The one thing that makes this book for me is the battle, or all out war, that occurs at the end. It is by and far the best space battle I have ever read. It is superbly written and described, Asher doesn't waste page space with boring details, it is visceral, hard hitting, tense. It is that good.

This battle alone tips the book into five star territory. There are one or two lulls in the story before this point, Asher had a habit of going into intricate details about how to solve a problem, or how this character MacGyver's a situation, which is tedious. A couple of characters are just there with no real personality. However, this all leads to this epic battle, which is definitely worth the wait.

A brilliant book.
Profile Image for Jason.
1,179 reviews288 followers
July 22, 2015
3 Stars

Orbus, book three in the Spatterjay trilogy is a far fall from the wonders and sheer awesomeness of the first book. I confess that due to my love of the genre that this was more like a 4 star read to me that I get had to take away from my score because it does not compare to the start of the series. I absolutely loved books one and two with the first one being a knock out. The world of Spatterjay is a science fiction and technological dream. The Hoopers are one of the greatest fictional characters ever created...

Orbus is a very narrowly scoped book that really can summed up in just a few sentences. A very large and unkillable man, a sentinent war drone, and a sidekick come to head against two extremely genetically mutated bugs/squids/men/machines in a bad place called the Graveyards. They all find out that their is a really, really,really big bad out there that appears to be coming back. Gun fights ensue. Killings, maiming, and mutilating also occur.

Orbus is an amazing larger than life Hooper that is a great addition to the series. The Old Captains should have many more novels written about them as they are sheer awesomeness. Sniper is back and is just as bad ass and wise cracking as before. The Prador are scary, gross, and really freaking cool.

I love Neal Asher and cannot wait to read more of his books as there are many. The world of Spatterjay is a must read for ALL science fiction lovers. Unfortunately, this one is not necessary to read to appreciate the world that Asher has built.
Profile Image for Noémie J. Crowley.
693 reviews130 followers
May 9, 2023
Conclusion de la trilogie Spatterjay, Orbus suit le capitaine, eh bien, Orbus, un vieil habitant de la planète sujet au virus, voyageant vers le Cimietière, un no man’s land immense entre les frontières de la Polity et du Royaume des Prador, où se rend également le Prador Vrell, muté par le virus et de plus en plus dangereux.

Vous le savez, depuis que j’en parle, mais Neal Asher est criminellement peu discuté en France - au point où le 3e tome de cette trilogie n’a apparemment même pas été traduit en français … Alors que, wow, quelle fin ! Sans conteste le meilleur livre des 3 (suffisamment rare pour le souligner), il offre une conclusion haute en couleurs, nerveuse, et toujours superbement équilibrée entre action et introspection. Bref, du grand space opera, toujours !
Profile Image for Alexander.
7 reviews
April 22, 2024
She “Or” on my leech till I “Bus”
She Orbus on my leech till I Spatter(jay 3)
She virally infect me until my spermatozoa become vicious infighters (actual plot point)

When prador from the 4th kingdom hit you with that softshell stare 💀

Yeah
Profile Image for Lady*M.
1,069 reviews107 followers
March 31, 2015
Orbus, an Old Captain from Spatterjay, has left his sadistic ways after the near death experience and decided to change the climate. As a captain of the trade space ship he goes go Graveyard carrying with him the two drone stowaways. Soon, it becomes clear that they we all manipulated by ruling AIs, because the Prador runaway Vrell, mutated by Spatterjay virus has gone in the same direction. Both Prador king and the Polity take the interest in the situation as well as their weapons. The Spatterjay virus has its own secrets and it will take the combine forces of former enemies to stop the danger to all civilized universe.

This was a wild ride through and through. Once the action starts, it continues to the very end. The last part of the book is explosive and had me at the edge of my seat. Did I mentioned before that I like Sniper? But, in this book some of the Prador gained much needed complexity as well and I was very satisfied with the outcome.

Orbus was not as awesome as the first book in trilogy, but it was much better than the second one. Great addition to the series.
Profile Image for Vít.
786 reviews56 followers
May 28, 2021
Třetí díl série se od prvních dvou dost liší - především tím, že se neodehrává na Spatterjay. Za to dám hvězdičku dolů, i když chápu, že o pijavicích atd. se nedá psát donekonečna.
Na druhou stranu, Orbus je zdaleka nejakčnější ze všech tří knih, to tempo je místy šílené. Hodně velký prostor dostal Snajpr (paráda), což napovídá, že se bude hodně střílet, vybuchovat, anihilovat, trhat na cucky, nadávat a na závěr nezůstane zrovna moc věcí pohromadě. Takže vlastně super :)

Edit 27.5.2021:
Přečteno potřetí a nechávám 4 hvězdičky, pořád mě to baví. Kromě explozí tu taky najdete ledacos z historie pradorského království a taky smrtící pozůstatky civilizace Džainů - a tak můžete plynule pokračovat novinkou Voják. Já na to jdu hned :)
Profile Image for Pippa Jay.
Author 21 books209 followers
March 21, 2011
Of all the Neal Asher books I've read so far, this is my favourite. The story is fast-paced and full of gloriously grim descriptions. The sardonic interplay between Old Captain Orbus and his disgustingly-named crewmate Drooble are hilarious, as is the strange relationship between the drones Sniper and Thirteen. And over it all looms the mutating Prador Vrell, being hunted by the Prador King and a mythical monster of Prador nightmares, the Golgoloth. Gripping, chilling and entertaining. Not recommended to Asher newcomers but to the seasoned veterans!
Profile Image for Luke Allen.
Author 11 books22 followers
March 18, 2018
A great finish to the trilogy. It never sets foot on the planet Spatterjay but the Spatterjay virus is, effectively, the central plot piece that ties everything together. Whilst the plot mechanisations are swiftly dealt with in the first half, it’s later half is a series of ever escalating set pieces that are just enormous.

It’s a testament to how much I enjoy Asher’s work that, even though it wouldn’t feature in my top 3 favourites, it’s still worthy of a 5 star rating. It’s just a blast.
Profile Image for Jack.
86 reviews1 follower
May 25, 2025
The weirdest trilogy I've ever read. This third book is bins off half the characters and world building of the first two, and just becomes a completely different story. At least this one had some plot worth following unlike the second one.
Profile Image for Ben Hatfield.
25 reviews23 followers
July 20, 2017
Way better than The Voyage of the Sable Keech, but not up to the level of The Skinner. Really this book is all about following some already established characters, but to say this book is a continuation of the first two books would be misleading. Instead of the wildly exotic Spatterjay environment, we follow an old ship captain, a mutated prador, and a war drone through their struggles in and around various space ships. Really this book is way more about the characters than the environment, where as The Voyage of the SK is a lot about the events on a single large boat on Spatterjay, and The Skinner is all about the various dangers of the planet itself. There actually is a trend to how the series of books has been conceived. I enjoyed following the three main characters, and even the 5 or so important characters around them - action, bloodshed and transformations. Fun to see bitter enemies become unwilling allies, working together out of need. While entertaining, and worth reading - I really pine for content from The Skinner. The brutality and mystery of that environment is really only captured in that book and a short story or two. Part of the mystery of Spatterjay becomes a crucial story element in Orbus, and I didn't like the clear explanation of what the Spatterjay virus is, and why it exists - it's that clear explanation of how it all fits together that I don't like. If there is ancient genetic code with deep secrets from super intelligences... perhaps the pandora's box effect doesn't need to have such a clear explanation - I'd rather the Spatterjay virus had yet unexplained depth, but I don't see how that is possible with how this book explores that content. Just my opinion - and not really a huge hit to this book, but Neal seems to understand the importance of maintaining mystery, so I was surprised how this was handled.
Profile Image for Jana.
251 reviews9 followers
January 22, 2019
One could guess that some plausibly deniable mayhem might ensue.


A really satisfying end to what has been an absolute joy of a trilogy. I've seen quite a few reviews (especially of The Voyage of the Sable Keech) complain about these books getting a bit samey, and they're not wrong. But if you leave a bit of time between reading each, especially between the first two, having more of the same is THE BEST. I love plausibly deniable mayhem.

Orbus is quite different in that it takes us away from Spatterjay, and has a much greater focus on the Prador and the Prador King (who is epic). However, the virus is still at its centre, and it features Sniper, in all his glory, and Vrell, who turns out to be great. Who'd have thought I'd be rooting for a Prador?

Orbus himself is more haunted by his past than the other Old Captains, and for most of this book I was a little puzzled about why it was named for him, since he doesn't actually feature all that much. But I think, in the end, he is the symbol of a lot of themes in the book--a denial of learned behaviour, overcoming prejudices and, as always, an intense will to survive. It would be awesome to read about his and the surviving crew's adventures after the conclusion of this book (I haven't checked, but I suspect we don't revisit them in future novels. What a pity).

Star rating: I dock one star because the technobabble gets a little bit much at times, but add one because the action and huge battles are really well rendered and the book wraps the series up well, making the total five again. Also there weren't any pointless subplots (I'm looking at you, giant whelk).
Profile Image for Nia Sinjorina.
Author 8 books14 followers
February 28, 2019
And so we step off of the planet where every drop of ocean water is as likely to eat you as wet you and into a space opera classic: giant capital ships, huge weapons, mega explosions, and lots of sneaking around in between pitched battles.  It's Asher doing what he does best: massive tech on a stellar scale.

Full of twists and turns an electric pace, and moments of comedy, Asher also explores the more rational side of the Prador - some of them anyway - a race it would be easy to paint as monochrome monsters. Of great interest was the development of the Jain side of the universe, just whispers up until now but setting the scenes for more discussions of the older races in the more recent books (I think I'm reading backwards ;-))

An excellent third book that offers a satisfying conclusion and a reluctant farewell to some fabulous characters.

Fleecy Moss, author of the Folio 55 SciFi fantasy series (writing as Nia Sinjorina), End of a Girl, Undon , and 4659 now available on Amazon.

Profile Image for Marco Paganini.
115 reviews6 followers
March 11, 2021
The book tells the story of captain Orbus, a troubled "Old Captain" from planet Spatterjay looking for a new chapter in his life. Seeking new horizons, he leaves planet Spatterjay and becomes the captain of the space cargo hauler Gurnard, but soon realizes there's a bit more to his new job that it seems. He reacquaints himself with some old friends (from the previous books) and some new characters as well (which I won't say here, to avoid spoiling the fun.)

In contrast to the previous books in the series, the story in "Orbus" happens entirely in space. There's a limited (but important) set of well known characters, and a few very unexpected new ones. This book is action-packed from beginning to end and also closes a lot of gaps from previous books in the Polity series.

In my opinion, the best book in the Spatterjay trilogy, and a complete page turner for me.
Profile Image for Fred.
580 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2019
Wasn’t sure this would be a good one since Orbus is not a very exciting character. However I soon realized that this but was not so much about Orbus, as it was about the much cooler characters of Spider the killer AI and Vrell the vicious Prador. In fact I don’t understand why this book was named after Orbus. Vrell would have been a better name. Anyways awesome book about the Prador and the Jain super soldiers. Much better than the 2nd Spatterjay book, and almost better than the 1st Spatterjay book.
Profile Image for Miki.
499 reviews24 followers
Want to read
January 21, 2014
More a three-and-a-half-star book. Asher shading into space opera, and doing so in somewhat undistinguished fashion. Lots of Prador history exposition, but with confused results, making them a little more human but inconsistently so. Similarly indeterminate humanization of Orbus himself, with a scattering of psychological vignettes but no real depth. Maybe not three-and-a-half after all.
Profile Image for Gav.
219 reviews
Read
December 25, 2022
Orbus is the third book in the Spatterjay series – I know this as William Gaminara reminded me when he started narrating Neal Asher’s return to Sniper and Vrell. This time we the switch in focus to Captain Orbus as he takes us away from the planet Spatterjay and out to the Graveyard, border between the Polity and the Prador Kingdom.

But before we continue I highly recommend reading The Skinner and The Voyage of The Sable Keech first as Orbus is not a good jumping on point, being the last (so far) in this loosely connecting series. I guess you could read it in isolation but you’d miss a lot what makes Orbus a brilliantly imagined book. If you’re continuing to read I’m including spoilers form now on in. So with that in mind…

Spoiler Warning

Asher has been keeping secrets, the virus of Spatterjay isn’t all that it appears. It is so much more. And the evolution to its true nature is one part of what makes Orbus a crackling read.

At the end of the last book Vrell had entered Vrost’s ship but it’s what he does there which causes the viruses true nature to be revealed and causes the Prador King personally to arrive to finish the job that Vrost has so far failed to do. And you can see why a Prador who is infected with the Spatterjay virus shouldn’t be allowed to leave. Asher also introduces us to the Golgoloth, a myth and a story to scare young Prador, and a creature is that is very real.

Together they create a mix and a direction that I wasn’t expecting after the low level storytelling of the first two as this time the stakes could not be higher for King personally as well as the Kingdom and probably the Polity if the virus manages to get loose, which sounds dramatic, and it is.

Asher gets to stretch himself writing a grand space battle which he handles with fineness as he winds back time to see events from different views and plays out smaller dramas along with the big battle.

Orbus, being an old sea captain, infected with virus and very much mentally tainted by the Polity/Prador war on Spatterjay as explained in The Skinner and The Voyage of Sable Keech makes him a darker hero to follow. And his struggle with killing or saving Vrell at several points makes great reading.

Not that Orbus was expecting this mission when he signed up to Captain the trade ship Gurnard but Asher uses this book to demonstrate the the Polity AIs are quite manipulative and forward thinking.

End Spoiler Warning

The thing I like about Asher is that he’s always pushing and exploring his creation (the Polity). For example I’m going to read The Technician as soon as I can and that is supposed to feature a black (as in magician) AI. Now they might feature in his Agent Cormac series, which after The Technician will be the only books in the Polity I’ve not read, but I know it’s generated a sequel, Penny Royal, that he’s writing now.

But back to Orbus and a question: what should science fiction do? In Asher’s case his science fiction tells a great roller-coaster story and explores survival, genetics, societies, technology and other themes should be present in science-focused fiction. And he manages to show deep thinking without derailing the story he’s chosen to tell.

Though the voice telling this tale is that of William Gaminara who also lifted The Skinnerand The Voyage of Sable Keech off the page. It’s staggering to think that not only does Gaminara have to read for 14 hours plus but he also has to keep up with what voices he’s given to each character and it’s so smoothly done that when he slips (and he did only a handful of times) do you realise how effortless his narration feels.

For me Asher is a master craftsman and makes the Polity one of my favourite storytelling environments. It’s a universe that I’d urge any SF fan to explore right now.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ola G.
518 reviews51 followers
June 15, 2024
8/10 stars

My full review on my blog.

The conclusion to the Spatterjay trilogy takes us back to space, far away from the murderously interesting planet Spatterjay, but not away from the root cause of its lethality – and all those fascinated by the ancient Jain should have a field day with Orbus because Asher really pulls out all the stops.

Orbus is a quintessential Asher novel – gory, imaginative, baroquely violent and darkly humorous, mixing a frontier redemption story with high octane space battles, but this time with a surprising twist: the secret ingredient of optimism, so far away from the typical Hobbesian view of sentient life Asher usually presents, unexpectedly warmed my heart. Who would’ve thought Asher would turn out to be such a cuddly Care Bear? Not me, that’s for sure ;).

I had a blast with Orbus, and enjoyed Asher’s conclusion to the Spatterjay trilogy more than I initially thought I would. While I missed the lethal craziness of life on Spatterjay, and the Old Captains I had grown attached to, I still had a handful of characters from previous installments to cheer for – and, let’s be honest, when I realized one of them was the war drone Sniper, I knew I was in for a wild ride.

[...]

While nothing in Orbus (except the aforementioned optimism) was unexpected, and the middle sagged a little, the way the events followed one another and linked together in the end turned out quite satisfying. To put it simply, Asher has a penchant for imaginative, violent, explosive action, and Orbus is full of it. Are the events all logical, or even unavoidable within the limits of the novel? No, of course not. But the ride is wild, and it is fun. My one regret is that Asher slowed down on innovativeness in Orbus, more focused on tying together the disparate strands of the previous two novels than on introducing new concepts – well, maybe except for a surprising but very welcome call for cultural diversity :). It’s not as good as Spatterjay, or as madly entertaining as The Voyage of Sable Keech, but it is still good old Asher having loads of fun.
811 reviews8 followers
August 3, 2024
In this final volume of the Spatterjay trilogy, we are away from the planet. Old Captain Orbus is in charge of a space freighter and is in the Graveyard, an area of space that is a buffer zone between the Prador Empire and the Polity. While we meet the Prador, Vrelle, and (the two best characters of the trilogy), the wardrone, Sniper, and his side kick, Number Thirteen, we meet new characters, the Prador King and a rogue Prador, Golgogoth. The author has chosen to tell the story in this 3rd volume entirely in the present tense, I'm not quite sure why. I do have some difficulty in accepting the Prador generally. I get that their general violence towards each other is a response to their reproductive behaviour and enormous number of births. But my difficulty is in seeing how such a race where younger siblings are in terror of both their elder siblings and their fathers. Would such a race ever realistically have been stable enough to reach an advanced technical level, let alone star flight? And a point that has just occurred to me, but which may have escaped my attention. Are all 1st, 2nd, and 3rd children male? What happens to female off spring? I'm glad I've reached the end of the saga for, at times, it was hard going.
Profile Image for Mike Gilbert.
106 reviews2 followers
October 15, 2020
This is probably my least favorite of the Spatterjay books. Too much AI (even though Sniper is pretty cool) and too much Jain, all of the things that sort of wore me out of the latest two trilogies.

The story is still good - and it’s cool to continue along with Vrell as a lead character and to even see things from the eye-stalks of a few other Prador.

Maybe I just need a break from oversight of Earth Central...
Profile Image for Michelle.
32 reviews
May 24, 2022
This was a great ending to a fantastic series. I felt 100% connected with some of the strangest of "people" - I have to say at the start I was concerned about the use of hate-mongering to build an enemy but the character development ended up the best of the series.
Also, Neal continues with his great attention to detail so that you can see the action happening in your brain eyes. And there is lots of action. And tension. And I need to know what happened moments.

Great read!
Profile Image for Lee Belbin.
1,278 reviews8 followers
November 3, 2017
A good read as a logical continuation of the Spatterjay series. Obviously, this one is centered around one of the old (and quirky) Spatterjay Captains, Orbus. It is Orbus, Sniper and Thirteen up against, but not quite, the Prador and another prior party, the Jain. As ever, more action than you can easily handle, plenty of twists and turns. A solid read.
Profile Image for BeefSupreme.
16 reviews
December 4, 2017
The 3rd book in this series is the strongest one. It could have been a free standing book since there is not much story from the previous 2 books. The previous 2 books is a good addition to the whole story of the universe though.

Action filled book with not much downtime, the ending leaves a big opening for a 4th book or a new series entirely without making you feel that it ends abruptly.
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