What do you think?
Rate this book


Part Two of THE END OF ALL THINGS, available in four thrilling installments. The full novel will be available once all installments are published.
OUR FATE IS IN THEIR HANDS. . .
The Colonial Union's Defence Force was formed to save humanity, as aggressive alien species targeted our worlds. Now Lieutenant Harry Wilson has an urgent new mission, as a hostile universe becomes ever more dangerous. He must investigate a sinister group, which lurks in the darkness of space playing different factions against one another. They'll target both humans and aliens, and their motives are unfathomable.
The Defence Force itself is weakening as its soldiers fall - without recruits to replace them. Relations with Earth have broken down and it will send no more troops, even as human colonies become increasingly vulnerable to alien attack.Lieutenant Wilson and Colonial Union diplomats must race to keep the peace, seek reconciliation with an enraged Earth, and keep humanity's union intact. If they don't, it will mean oblivion, extinction and the end of all things.
92 pages
First published June 16, 2015
My position has come largely form being usefully competent to others, each more powerful than the next. I have always been the one who stands behind, the one who counts heads, the one who offers advice.Where The Life of Mind was a tense escape story, This Hollow Union is all about the various political machinations and factions that populate the Conclave and how to manage the fallout from the events in The Life of Mind. There is a lot of plotting, maneuvering, and spur of the moment moves to keep everything in a delicate balance. Just as the shadowy organization has ill intentions towards the Colonial Union, so too does it have its eyes set on fracturing the Conclave.
And, also, the one who has to sit in meeting with anxious politicians, listening to them wring whatever appendages they wring about The End of All Things.
"You have no sense of adventure."She is a very serious person who is doing a very serious, and at times impossible and thankless job, constantly on guard against sharks that would rip apart the Conclave for their own ends. It shows Scalzi has a nice range of writing and isn't all technology and sarcasm (not that we didn't know that from his other work, but is always nice to get it reconfirmed).
"I do have a sense of adventure. It's overawed by my sense of self-preservation."