Nightrider. The most powerful self-commanding space war craft ever built. Its computerized human brain is nearly perfect, its six-person crew virtually unnecessary. Until Nightrider begins making mistakes. The flesh-and-blood destroyers are finishing uip a mission of deadly discipline on the rebel outpost of Planet Hel. But the ultimate war machine has only just begun to fight. Its new enemies: The men and women who taught it how to kill – the members of its own crew . . .
I picked this book up at a used book store and it sounded very good and I was really looking forward to reading it. It was somewhat disappointing. It had too many descriptions for minor details while leaving large gaps in the story-line. It was not a very good read. I was expecting a better story from the description on the back cover.
The book was disjointed. Too much description for things that most people wouldn't care about while leaving gaps when it should have been there. Not a very good read. Was expecting much more than offered.