Three bestselling volumes--Sassinak, The Death of Sleep, and Generation Warriors--together in a single giant novel. McCaffrey traces the careers of two remarkable women--Sassinak and Lunzie--who work together to save a confederation of worlds.
Anne Inez McCaffrey was an American writer known for the Dragonriders of Pern science fiction series. She was the first woman to win a Hugo Award for fiction (Best Novella, Weyr Search, 1968) and the first to win a Nebula Award (Best Novella, Dragonrider, 1969). Her 1978 novel The White Dragon became one of the first science-fiction books to appear on the New York Times Best Seller list. In 2005 the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America named McCaffrey its 22nd Grand Master, an annual award to living writers of fantasy and science fiction. She was inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame on 17 June 2006. She also received the Robert A. Heinlein Award for her work in 2007.
I picked this book up without any real thought at a time when I was having to travel six hours on a train twice a week. I was waiting for the train and had finished the book I was reading, so I needed another, and so, with very little to spare, I grabbed it. I had only read one book (Nimisha's Ship) at this point, and had liked it, and I could not find anything else in the train station store that was even remotely interesting, so with no time left, I grabbed it and I'm glad I did!
One of the things I tend to enjoy most in a novel is well developed characters and Anne McCaffrey is excellent at this. I was hooked on the first book and read the entire Omnibus through in just a few sittings. This impulse buy turned out to be a blessing, and I have since lent it to friends who all say the same thing... Awesome.
This was..... disappointing to say the least. I did like it, but the ending wrapped up too neatly and certainly much too quickly.
As I child, I absolutely knew who Anne McCaffrey was; scifi fantasy has always been a favored genre. However, as voracious a reader as I was, I somehow managed to read Pern almost exclusively when I was devoting any time to her at all among the myriad of other authors I had discovered. Her other series I have read are Catteni, Crystalsinger and some of Petaybee. That there were other works was just a vague notion so when I came across The Ireta Adventure I was quite happy to settle down with it and much enjoyed it. This, of course, led to the discovery of Planet Pirates. I was excited to learn more of Lunzie and meet Sassinak.
Reality, however, did not merge with expectation. Lunzie spent so much time sleeping that she stayed quite flat even with all the time we spent in her head. I must say I didn’t like her much for all that I wanted to. As for Sassinak, her I did enjoy meeting and wanted to know more of so that odd twenty year gap in her career was disappointing. There were inconsistencies, contradictions and other gaps noted throughout all three books where things just happened and because there was no lead in it was completely out of left field.
However, the biggest disappointment for me was as I already mentioned: the hurried ending. This omnibus is almost 900 pages long and the ending was wrapped up in less than 50. That it was so rushed left it all a bit of a muddle with unanswered questions .
+++Three complete novels make up this trilogy: The Death of Sleep, Sassinak & Generation Warriors. A terrific space opera following the life and cold sleeps of Lunzie Mespil. She never saw her daughter Fiona again after she left her with a reliable friend to take a job necessary to give them food & shelter. The mining platform on which she is working as medical doctor is struck by an asteroid and she enters her first cold sleep lasting over 60 years. Once again working as a medical doctor with an exploratory expedition she is involved with a mutiny and again goes into cold sleep for over 35 years. The Fleet Cruiser which is involved in her rescue & revival is the Zaid-Dayan commanded by her great-great-great granddaughter Sassinak who is older than Lunzie in real (awake) time. Sass has gone through her own life of trials by constantly striving and always believing in herself, an attitude given her by her foster father and mentor Abe. Orphaned and enslaved by planet pirates Sass was able to survive because Abe who was also a slave instructed her in how to do so. Then when they were freed he arranged for her to be educated and enrolled at the Fleet Academy. Finally the entire crew & friends: Sass, Ford, Arly, Tim, Dupaynil, Aygar, Admiral Coromell, the underground dispossessed, student idealists and Fleur all helped to circumvent and invasion by a Seti fleet, clean out a totally corrupt system of government, find justice and reparation for heavy worlders and other oppressed minorities.+++
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I LOVED this 3 book collection. Sorry to have it end, actually. Pirates, heavyworlders, cold sleep and great strong women. The first book was written by Anne and Jody Lynn Nye. Excellent collaboration. The second and third were by Anne and Elizabeth Moon. One can tell the second is Elizabeth’s early writing as there are some gaps and odd jumps in style and continuity. However by the third book, Elizabeth has hit her stride. Didn’t want to leave those folks I had grown to know and like.
This book is a little difficult at first. It starts off slow and boring, but picks up pace as you go. If you stick with it, Anne McCaffrey paints a vivid picture in your mind, a sprawling universe that has so much storytelling potential. After reading this McCaffrey quickly became one of my favorite authors.
In good news, this book unites all the Planet Pirates book. That's the only good news. I hope that you bought it used, because if you bought it new, you're going to hate yourself. If you've read ten pages, then you know what you're getting info, so if you don't like the beginning, know that it gets no better.
I own almost every book Anne McCaffrey wrote. She had a gift for creating engaging characters that made the plot sing. This series, co-written with Jody Lynn Nye and Elizabeth Moon, is great. If you haven't read it, hopefully your public library will have them.
I took a break from reading Elizabeth Moon's Familias Regnant series to read this, because in a way it was (I speculate) the inspiration for the Familias Regnant series - spaceships and high society. (In space.) Sassinak, the middle book, was one I enjoyed a great deal when I was younger. I'm honestly not sure if I'd ever read The Death of Sleep or Generation Warriors before. I want to say yes, but I'm not sure. Overall: I think this was good but terrible, if that makes any sense. Some of the characters were interesting in the sense of not being too perfect. But they were very irritating, and the wrapup seemed a little too pat. Addressing each book specifically:
The Death of Sleep - So much of this is having to be inside Lunzie's head and deal with her bigotry/fear toward heavyworlders. (People who have been genetically modified to live on high-gravity worlds.) It's kind of ... awful, really. Probably realistic, but not pleasant.
Sassinak - The title character is kind of a badass Sue, if there is such a thing. Skipping over ~20 years, from her first cruise as an ensign to her becoming the captain of a cruiser, was kind of disappointing. And the scene on the bridge where she's reminding her executive officer/lover that he's seen her nightmares in front of the whole bridge crew made me cringe.
Generation Warriors - I hate to admit that parts of this were boring and I just wanted it to end, but I did. Some characters who previously weren't that well developed were used as viewpoint characters, and I don't think it worked well.
(FYI I tend to only review one book per series, unless I completely change my mind on a series, so want to change my scoring down a lot)
First time read the author's work?: No
Will you be reading more?: Yes
Would you recommend?: Yes -- One of my favourite authors, I tend to rate her series at 4 or 5 stars.
-------- How I rate Stars: 5* = I loved (must read all I can find by the author) 4* = I really enjoyed (got to read all the series and try other books by the author). 3* = I enjoyed (I will continue to read the series) or 3* = Good book just not my thing (I realised I don't like the genre or picked up a kids book to review in error.)
All of the above scores means I would recommend them! - 2* = it was okay (I might give the next book in the series a try, to see if that was better IMHO.) 1* = Disliked
Note: adding these basic 'reviews' after finding out that some people see the stars differently than I do - hoping this clarifies how I feel about the book. :-)
i remember really enjoying these when i was 12 or 13, and i think they probably were good for me at that age. unfortunately, they don't stand up as novels for adults. Sassinak and Generation Warriors both have some excellent character development (and some less-excellent as well, but all the viewpoint characters are very well composed, and several others), the writing is still fairly inattentive and simplistic. scenes lack transitions, and too much is glossed over too quickly. the whole thing reads like it was written on a deadline. and (SPOILER ALERT) the ending of all three of these novels is a flat-out deus ex machina, with the alien Thek taking the place of god in the machine. ker-chunk. well, the Thek are here and they just did everything to wrap up those bad guys, so i guess we all get to go celebrate some personal growth now, ta da. VERY flat ending, particularly of Generation Warriors, which was otherwise the best of the lot in terms of plotting.
The Planet Pirates Omnibus is a prime example of the Sci-Fi section in a underfunded library, in it's own separate spinning metal rack, deemed unworthy of placement among the shelves. The often musty paperbacks that fill this section are often science fiction stories from the 80s and 90s that lack serious world building, plausibility or grimness of today's novels, but are endearing all the same. Ethan of Athos would be another example of this subgenre.
I picked this omnibus up randomly during a vacation and read it cover to cover within the week. Once you look past the the obvious violations of physics (indeed that is the point!) it becomes an excellent example of a story where the world/society/universe isn't doomed by the machinations of technology, aliens, or our own miscalculations or stupidity.
I don't have much more to say about this series than what I wrote about the individual books. Plagued by wordiness, a society and philosophy that no longer seems relevant or interesting, and characters who don't seem to act or feel real; a storyline that is not nearly ambitious enough, boring and bogged down in details; writing that makes these respected and experienced storytellers feel like rank amateurs. I think I'm just not cut out to enjoy McCaffrey's books, but I'm sure some people are. The same goes for Elizabeth Moon. However I can only give my opinion based upon my own reading of their books, so take it for what it is: I can't recommend this series to anyone except perhaps avid fans of Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon.
I was excited to find this at a used book store because I recently discovered the short Dinosaur Planet series and, as this has some of the same characters, I was looking forward to reading more. Unfortunately, it didn't quite meet up to expectations. The ending wrapped up WAY too fast, especially after reading all this build-up from the first two books, intrigue, plots, galaxy-wide conspiracies.....and then in a chapter, it's over. Some parts were fun to read and it mostly held my attention. All in all, as a huge fan of Anne McCaffrey's Dragonriders of Pern series, it was nice to branch out and read some of her other works, but I probably won't be picking this up again anytime soon.
Thank goodness it's over; should not have been the thought mainly going through my head.
While these books did offer a different (one might even say better) perspective on Dinosaur Planet/Dinosaur Planet Survivors; most mysteries were tied up nicely, and the ending is satisfying enough in regards to that - still, there was so much that could have been done here with the two main characters that simply was not.
My copy came from the Rio Grande Valley Library system. City of Albuquerque. Hardback. The story came together too smoothly. An Ann feature. The first part was too touch feely. A Jody feature. The last parts were very martial. An Elizabeth feature. Cheesy as and yet a ripping yarn. So many future branches explored. 890 pages of good read.
A good, yet long novel. Ups and downs. It has nostalgic points for me. I finished it! Nothing too amazing. Some interesting themes, pretty standard sci-fi plot. I started this is 6th grade and then put it down to finish 5 years after I graduated from college. Go figure.
Omnibus containing 1)Sassinak 2)Generation Warriors & 3)The Death of Sleep.
This is one of my favorite space opera series of all time! Fans of space opera should definitely make this a priority and fans of futuristic romance author Linnea Sinclair should give it a try, too.
Three books in one, which saves time trying to track them down individually. I really liked the two main characters and their stories. My only complaint is that the last book felt rushed and could have been written better. On the whole though it was entertaining and fun.
The Planet Pirates McCaffrey, Anne a compilation of the series including many of the adventures of Sassaki and her historical expanse over generations, and how she fought against the people who tried to take over the universe.
Sad and depressing, it was so realistic. Got you into the main character's plight very seemlessly. I love Anne McCaffrey's writing style, and this does not disappoint. Just be prepared, it is not sunshine and rainbows. It is far more realistic science fiction.
Notice I rated this fat book lower than the individual stories, While it is nice to get all three together it is to wordy. However the only copy of Book Two in the Norfolk Library system is this one so I had to check it out.
over all a decent action flick that kept me on my toes during my morning commute. love the development of the characters and how we got to see them grow