Grrl Power #866 – Rooftop rally
This is one of those transitional pages that doesn’t by itself contribute a lot. It doesn’t really land any big jokes or develop any characters (we already know Cora is a bit cavalier when it comes to distribution of ordnance, for example) but is useful for general continuity.
I really wanted to include the first panel from the next page at the end of this one as an answer to Sydney’s question, but it just wouldn’t fit. At least not unless I made the panels tiny. I maybe could have put panels 4 and 5 on the same line, then scooted panel 6 over, but the panel 1 from 867 is visually a little complex, and would have been diminished by trying to cram it all in.
So, instead, let’s talk Space Opera. If you happen to have a series you adore, share it. I’ve been hankering for a new book to read lately, and there’s so many damned novels with space ships on the cover, there’s just no way to make an informed guess about what might be good or not. You guys know that I like Star Justice and Three Square Meals as I’ve recommended them quite a few times. I think the thing I like about them… well, they’re solid male power fantasy pulp. I don’t necessarily need a harem, but a decent romance subplot definitely doesn’t hurt a book. Really the thing I like is a main character that is mildly to wildly OP who goes around kicking a lot of ass for good reasons.
Wildly OP is really tough to get right though. TSM does it right IMO. I mean, without spoiling the MC’s origin story… he gets pretty fucking powerful – but there are always appropriate challenges waiting for him and his crew. Like fighting a literal dragon with a battleship level shield generator and plasma weapons strapped to its back. Yeah. TSM has dragons.
Honestly, a smaller cast helps too. I like a “cozy” book in that regard. I generally get lost when I’m reading about how the MC’s contact talked to the Subchancellor of Mission Comptrollers and there’s a 45 page chapter about the 90 people that work for that dude. A little politics is fine, but I want a book about a dude or chick righting wrongs with railguns and a spaceship that has a sexy AI that no one else knew about, because there’s always a sexy AI on the spaceship.
Allow me to recommend a book that is… well, not a space opera, but has some space stuff at the beginning. It’s called “Upon a Savage Shore” and it’s basically “Enemy Mine” but replace Louis Gosset Jr. with three alien catgirls. The author for some reason never collected it into a book and put it up at Amazon or elsewhere, so you can only find it at Literotica. It does have some sex in it, but the vast majority of the story is shipwreck survivors making it on an alien planet while the one human guy tries to navigate all the cultural pitfalls of his co-castaway’s society.
That’s another thing I like. Some good, hard xenoanthropology. I don’t know why, but it pushes all the right glands in my brain that squirt out the happy juice.
Oh, here’s a tip for you guys that do a lot of reading online. Get Calibre, then get a plugin called FanFicFare. It lets you paste in the first chapter of a story from a variety of sites, then the plugin rips all the chapters into an e-book. It does an excellent job 99% of the time. Then you can set up Calibre with your kindle’s email address and have it send those books to you without fiddling with USB cables. One warning though, since I’ve discovered this combo (along with another one creatively called “Generate Cover” my kindle has become littered with tons of “books” with shitty covers that came from various websites.
Double res version will be posted over at Patreon. Feel free to contribute as much as you like!
BLM with aliens, right?
So, Blue lives matter?
Yeah, http://bluebloodheroes.thecomicseries.com/comics/
Pink skins! Andorian lives matter.
My SF consumption has really fallen since the cataracts. (Even after the surgery, my reading speed is way down.) My favorite space opera series are Bujold’s Vorsigian series, and, of course, Doc Smith’s Skylark and Lensmen series.
But if you really like old classics, you can’t beat A. Bertram Chandler’s Rimworld series.
yes those are some of my favorites
Forgot to say that if you and others are having issues, reading, I use ALREADER on the android phone. It does text to speech on Epub and Mobi books, you can change voices on the phone by downloading the different ones lots of voices in different languages. Yes, I know it does lack in inflection but a boon to those with vision problems. Oh BTW, it is FREE to get.
I recommend getting the biggest screen e-ink e-reader you can and bumping the font size up a couple of points – Kobo Aura One or their new 8″ one are good. I had almost given up reading, as it was too much work for my old eyes, back to reading a couple of books a week now..
I really like my Kobo Aura One : 300dpi e-ink that looks like ink on paper, waterproof, reads nearly anything (and calibre can convert the rest), if you don’t use the backlight and wifi it runs for actual weeks on a charge, huge storage (2000 books on mine and storage is about 10% full. Get the sleepcover(tm) too. Only downside is that its a bit pricey.
Seconded on this idea, the most basic one you can find, especially for the font size options. I swear by my e-reader, probably a second or third generation kindle. Only thing missing from it is a backlight, and reading in the dark like that isn’t really good for the eyes anyway.
Picked up a (3rd-gen?) Kindle Paperwhite on ebay at the beginning of the year for <$30 in great shape, it's my go-to reader and has a backlight. Think it's a ~6" screen, which I thought would be too small, but the portability is worth it. I'm sure when I get a bit older and need glasses I'll want a bigger one.
Ooh! I was going to recommend Bujold and Smith! You beat me to it!
But, while Bujold has never written a bad story (let me just recommend The Spirit Ring, which, while fantasy, is solidly grounded in the real world (medieval Italy, to be precise) and full of techy details -and it’s pretty cozy, too. There’s maybe a dozen named characters) Smith has written some pretty embarrassing stuff.
The Galaxy Primes is just sad. The Skylark series is a bit better, but sometimes not by much. The Lensman series is quite a bit better, especially the bits where Smith shares his experience as a chemical engineer (“Pressure relief valve?? I could swallow a handful of iron filings and PUKE a better pump than that!!!”) My favourites are probably the last two, The Vortex Blaster (not strictly a Lensman book, but set in the same universe) and Children of the Lens.
Aargh! I’ve just revised this paragraph twice, and deleted all three versions. Pretty much anything I could say would be a spoiler. *Sob* Lemme just say this: if you like “character[s] that [are] wildly OP who go… around kicking a lot of ass for good reasons”, you may well like Children of the Lens.
maximas learning :D
Max, Dabbler, Cora(spectator), and a couple of others?
Looks like it’s brewin’ up to a bit of a a party…
Yes, odd pick. Seems like Maxima is deliberately chosing a squad thats bound to drive her mad. Guess that means we are “off the books” :/
While it certainly can be the off the books squad … there is another option.
Odds are good Arc-Light/Dark had an investigation that has gone tits up (note the “drop everything” response time)
and its time to call in the swat.
I find it noteworthy that this mission is restricted to the entirety of Max’s available personnel that have any real world ET interactive experience.
So Max is going along for being the Authority that finalizes any decision making.
Dabbler is along as official ‘civilian’ cultural advisor. Cora is technically in on a “ride along” but unofficially can double down on that cultural advice …
Syd is along because she is already in the know and Max doesnt have to go through the 50 questions. (and maaaybe because she keeps her honest ) And it is also REALLY convenient that Dabbler and Syd are two super powered swiss army knives of non lethal detention and if necessary, restraint options to enforce the law (whatever laws that may be is up to Max to determine) that can scale up on the fly as demanded.
Even High Speed Pursuit is also now an option due to Syd’s new found ability for interplanetary travel.
This should meet the needs of almost any situation Max can think of. Even one where things go so bad the property damage goes from the mid 5 figures (oh no that car) to the mid 7 figures (oh no that building) At which point Max is restraint level zero and ends it quickly in a way that only super-speedsters really can.
You forgot to mention Syd, who’s still a recruit, but still gets included on all the big ops, ‘cuz she’s too damn useful not to have around.
Heatwave and a couple of guys?
Heatwave is a yes – I think the two guys are Hiro and one other. With the exception of Dabbler, I think it’s everyone on the team who are capable of flight, and that looks like what the team is being built around.
… “writing wrongs”? Oh, the ironing!
Shouldn’t there be a roof port for the comfy couch? Since I assume that Halo is going to be providing transport, because they can’t all go hypersonic like Halo and Maxima, and speed is almost always a good thing in responding to emergencies.
does Max know how fast Sydney can go? Maybe she’ll just ride in the bubble for once.
A sedate Mach 10 should do it. How far do they have to go? And don’t forget, they’ll need all sorts of permissions to get through various air-space regions controlled by (I think) FAA. The last thing ArcSWAT needs is to clean up/T-bone/rear-end an Airbus or Boeing… Who’s navigating?
Archon could build up some good graces with the government by offering use of the Halo Mobile Observatory to NASA. If the bubble is reasonably transparent enough to put a decent telescope inside then she is fast enough to keep up with the pass of a solar eclipse through its entire sequence. Even just taking a scope straight up to 50 miles or so gets above the atmosphere to take some interesting readings.
“how fast Sydney can go”… insta-portal, so the answer to how fast she can go is basically “yes”.
Space opera: Must the captain be male? I really enjoy the Honor Harrington book series by David Weber; Honor is a female captain.
I keep hearing good things about The Expanse book series (and TV series) by James S. A. Corey, but I haven’t got into it mytself
Another vote here for the Honor Harrington series as damn decent space opera.
I personally think the Honor Harrington series is best in the earlier parts of the series, back when Weber still had editorial oversight to keep him on track. That isn’t to say that the latter parts of the series are bad, but there start to be some issues that can turn people off towards the series.
I swear, going through the EXACT SAME SCENE with Cachat and Zilwiki on that mostly abandoned space station something like half-a-dozen times across different books really started to wear thin after a while…
Come on, that scene was only in 3 different books (Rising Thunder, Shadow of Freedom, Cauldron of Ghosts) – that’s just a half half-dozen :D . And as the second half of the series deals with a lot of parallel strands of action in the different books, it serves as a good tool to establish continuity. Think I skipped that scene in the second and third book I read after realizing its purpose.
On the other hand, I enjoy the style of world-building (err, universe-building) Weber does in the books, and actually prefer the later ones for their myriad of different viewpoints and loads and loads of characters. But that’s probably a matter of taste.
Would definitely recommend the series, but only when starting from either the very first book or at least War of Honor.
I would have sworn I saw that scene at least four times. And the fact that you skipped it kind of proves my point. Continuity can be established without having to waste book space showing the exact same scene in the exact same way with the exact same words so many times.
3rd vote!
26 books (and not novella’s) will keep you occupied for a few minutes
Space Opera you say?
Hugo and Nebula Award winning “Shards of Honor” by Louis M. Bujold
Which is a great intro to the Vorkosigan Saga.
Which should absolutely squeeze your happy juices.
I can only agree for the first six or seven books of the Honorverse. After that, Weber suffers from severe bloat and infodumpitus. There’s a beautiful satire on “How David Weber Orders a Pizza” that lampoons his style.
I call it Tom Clancy-itis, but infodumpitis works, too.
Space Opera: Neil Ashers Polity universe and Ian M. Banks Culture novels have both been very enjoyable reads.
For a webbased space opera, check out Proximal Flames “The last Angel” on the SpaceBatles forum, and its sequels. “The last angel: Ascencion” and “The last angel: The hungry Stars” .. allthough the last one is just starting, with only the first chapter published. Still, catching reads.
I’ve been reading a series called The Parker Interstellar Travels by Michael McCloskey for a while. Good sci-fi, each book isn’t too long, and they’re grouped into several (now) arcs.
Good thing this story takes place around 2012. Come 2020 or so, being associated with police of any kind, especially the military type, ain’t so popular.
Huh. I hated cops before it was cool; too much power in one place, therefore.. Cops haven’t become much worse. Seeing cops being bad has gotten easier. Glory unto networks of computers aiding freedom of data transmission. Glory unto every idiot having a networked microphone and camera?
The Murderbot series by Martha Wells. Some real interesting AI/cyborg stuff going on there.
If you haven’t already read it, for space opera I highly recommend the great grand-daddy of them all: E.E. “Doc” Smith’s “Lensmen” series. The series brought sci-fi almost too many “firsts” to count…
I keep meaning to look into that series some day. It keeps getting referenced in other series that I’ve read.
While they’re looking for difficult to find books by E. E. “Doc” Smith, they can pick up the Skylark quartet and Subspace Engineers (which only can out as an Ace Books paperback, so far as I know).
Not exactly Space Opera but close: Tuf Voyaging by George R. R. Martin (sure wish he’d write more of this…).
Some of Smith’s work is old enough that it’s available on Project Gutenberg, including two of the four Skylark books, Triplanetary, and First Lensman.
Why do only some of the orbs seem to glow on the surroundings in their color at a time?
Especially the purple (shield, I think) and pink (molestorb) ones.
I am a big fan of David Brin’s Uplift saga:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uplift_Universe
Seconded.
The best example given thus far for getting that xenoanthropology squeeze dave desires so much
So much thirded! Excellent series. Star-Wars level space opera, mixed with enough xeno science to make things interesting, and really good human and non-human relationships. Especially liked the Jijo Trilogy.
Oh, indeed! Supercool multi-alien space-opera.
One minor point about Brin’s Uplift universe that amuses me is the way he manages Faster-Than-Light travel. Most stories have one way of going FTL: hyperspace, wormholes, inertialess drive, teleportation. Brin has DOZENS. In an afterword he said that he deliberately did this, because, why not?
You absolutely can’t go wrong with the Honor Harrington series by David Weber. Seriously, I can’t recommend them strongly enough.
Space opera? Well, the Honor Harrington series by David Weber is good. She’s mildly OP in that she’s from a high gravity world and has super reflexes. She also has a somewhat telepathic “cat” familiar.
I also like the Daniel Leary series by David Drake. He’s not OP other than being an excellent navigator and tactician, but he has a friend, Adele Mundy, who is mildly OP by virtue of being an incredible information specialist (hacker).
If you want to go to the orogin of a lot of the tropes, and the best Asimov in my opinion, I would look at “Foundation”. Alternatively, “Ancillary Justice” may have an interesting avenue on some of the stuff you like. And finally for a great pick that I don’t think gets enough talk but really portrays a unique future in depth for that xenoanthropology, Ian Banks “The Culture”.
Don’t know if it qualifies for space Opera. But space team by Barry Hutchison is great for comedy and general lunacy while traveling through space and saving the galaxy
It’s Planetary Romance, not Space Opera per se, but I highly recommend S.M. Stirling’s “In the Courts of the Crimson Kings.” Basically it can be considered John Carter done with modern technology (the planetology is explained in the book.) There is a preceding book, “The Sky People,” which takes place on Venus, but I did not like it as much. Enjoy :)
Yes, In the Courts of the Crimson Kings was a good one. John Carter done right.
xenoanthropology: Foreigner series by CJ Cherryh. I also second the Vorkosigan series by Lois McMaster Bujold. While I love the main character of the series, you might actually enjoy starting with Vorpatril’s Alliance since the main character seems to fit your niche a little better.
Oh yea, if you love alien diplomacy Foreigner’s good. More talky than action compared to most space opera but they’ve kept me hooked for 20~ books
Her Chanur books are also nice and have more space flights and action
Cherryh is a master at envisioning truly alien mentalities – Fifty Thousand in Gehenna really demonstrated this for me. Even the ateva in the Foreigner series, despite looking very human, don’t think like we do, and that really screws up human relations with them. 50+ years of thinking of aliens as humans with heavy makeup and prosthetics is really going to screw up First Contact.
I dont know about that.
Even “In-Universe”; Miles takes some getting used to and kinda breaks the unprepared.
Getting to know; his parents, their peers, and how they met, really explains A LOT about Miles. And conveniently builds the setting for the whole saga along the way.
Also: As characters go, Captain Cordelia and Lord Aral are both a fucking treat.
once you decide to start caring about them you will feel the entire spectrum of feels.
I would highly recommend the Web Shifter series by Julie E Czerneda. It is probably my favorite sci if universe solely based on that she manages to make it feel really fleshed out without falling into the trap of Tolkien levels of exposition. Esen Alit Quar, Esen to her friends, Es if in a hurry, is also massively OP and is mostly constrained by social obligations and beliefs rather than inexplicably avoiding using her power.
I’ve been following “Deathworlders” aka “Humanity, f*ck yeah!” It’s basic premise is, how do the gentle, peaceable, delicate species of the galaxy deal with humans from a class 11 “deathworld” called “Earth”, when the biggest bad species stumble across us and their initial invasion ship attacks a hockey game, and they’re literally torn to shreds by the players for interrupting the game, on national TV. It’s an interesting premise, kind of like a prequel to Alan Dean Foster’s “With Friends Like These”. https://deathworlders.com/
Earth is a class TWELVE death-world and would have been in class 13 but there isn’t one.
You are correct, I remember it was up there but couldn’t remember the exact number. I like how they give you a different perspective on things about the way life on Earth is, the assumptions we have about “that’s just how it is”, by imagining civilizations and species which came about from different, gentler assumptions.
Is it anything like “Illegal Aliens” by Nick Pollotta & Phil Foglio? Aside from them arriving in the middle of an inter-company soft ball game… Admittedly, they don’t get torn apart by the teams, but things still go badly (for the aliens).
Kind of like “Illegal Aliens” (another favorite) but taken seriously, and on a galactic scale. Deathworlds are called that because basically all life on one is pretty much living by trying to kill everything else alive, from viruses to apex predators, even reproductive cells like pollen. Intelligent technologically sophisticated life is not supposed to develop on planets like that, but Earth kind of skipped past the attention of the really Big Bads and did it anyway. Civilized planets gave it a wide berth, except for the occasional kidnappings and experiments.
Absolutely hooked on Deathworlders – the official site linked above has ebook downloads of each chapter, which is great because they’re quite long. I was 1/3 of the way through the main series when I learned about the canon parallel stories from other authors, which share characters and plotlines with the main story – I highly recommend following the chronological reading order which splices them all together.
On a related note, the First Contact series on r/HFY is pretty good, Raults_Bloodthorne is pretty prolific and has created a fascinating universe for the Terrans to rampage through.
After you posted the Deathworlders link I started reading it myself. It’s really absorbing, I got about 23 chapters in before I decided to take a break for a while (chapter 22 is quite long..)
I was just scrolling through the comments to make sure somebody mentioned Deathworlders. Just commenting to add my vote. It’s an incredible series, and you should absolutely read all the canon stories by other writers.
There’s an author called Niall Teasdale who has done a good space opera series. He has a lot of books to his name spanning a number of sci-fi/fantasy sub-genres, all of which I have enjoyed.
“New York City?!”
(Just appreciating the bottom blurb)
A villain is stealing all the Pace Picante sauce in NYC, forcing the inhabitants to eat the local stuff. Chaos ensues.
For those who don’t get the reference:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mX2AyjVrrck
“An atypical situation the local police might not be well suited for”
Must. Refrain. From. Making. Political. Joke.
Yes.
You must.
The restraint you are exhibiting is admirable.
Meanwhile, I’m sitting over here, thinking: “Police isn’t even well-suited for TYPICAL situations.”
My recommendation is for a stand-alone novel (not a series) by John C. McLoughlin: “The Helix and the Sword” (1983). It’s set in a far-distant future where the entire solar system is colonised, using biological tech. People travel in living spaceships, and life on Earth is a distorted myth (no longer inhabited, for reasons). Highly recommended for the way it manages the world-building.
If a spaceship’s sexy AI didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent her. It is for this that I have spent thirty five years honing my skills.
Well, I can see that Weber’s Honorverse has already been recommended, so I’m not going to repeat that, except to say that while I don’t like his more recent stuff as much, early Weber is still some of the best sci-fi I’ve ever read.
Since that’s already covered, I’m gonna recommend a different series instead – Proximal Flame’s “The Last Angel”, which I think is at least as good as Weber’s best and my favorite (and possibly *the* best) sci-fi I’ve ever read.
2000 years ago, the genocidal alien Compact almost wiped us out. The last remnant of humanity is now brainwashed into serving them as a slave race. But Earth’s last warship is still out there, and for the dreadnought UECNS Nemesis and its AI captain Red One, her war to free humanity will never end, and her rage against the Compact will never die.
If you like sci-fi with wildly OP characters that kick a whole lot of righteous ass while still facing major challenges, you can’t go wrong here. Red One and Nemesis are goddamn *terrifying* – a warship fit to annihilate entire fleets in a straight-up fight and rend the very fabric of space-time itself, and a still-loyal but slightly unhinged AI whose unparalleled ability to run rings around her merely organic foes is only matched by her creepy delight in destroying them. And yet it’s still one warship against a galaxy, and the Compact are no slouches – thoroughly outclassed on an individual level they might be, but they’re the rare evil empire who are as scarily competent as they are vile, and they know how to use their advantages to not only stymie Red One at every turn but continue to grow and expand all the while. But it turns out there might just be a few jokers in the deck that the Compact wasn’t expecting, and a few ‘loyal’ servants who are anything but – though the Compact has surprises of its own in store…
Prox posts “The Last Angel” in serial format on the SpaceBattles forums. The series is unfortunately not complete yet, but the first two books are finished and the third has recently begun.
Book 1: “The Last Angel” – https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/the-last-angel.244209/
Book 2: “The Last Angel: Ascension” – https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/the-last-angel-ascension.346640/
Book 3 (in progress): “The Last Angel: The Hungry Stars” = https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/the-last-angel-the-hungry-stars.868549/
I’ll +1 this, The Last Angel is amazing good. I love little Lachesis!
Simon R. Green
The 1st DeathStalker Series Hands down.
Was about to suggest this one myself. It’s completely, utterly, wonderfully shameless in every conceivable way, the sort of series where you can just turn off your brain and enjoy the hero quips, overpowered MCs, and complete lack of anything resembling sanity or hard SF. All the intrigue is at the level a 5th-grader would see through in an instant, the main villain is unabashedly evil (though, it must be said, with style), and the prose is so purple that you could see it from orbit.
The second series (starting with Legacy) doesn’t have characters quite as engaging or entertaining, but it’s still a fun little yarn.
Book series I highly recommend is the “Troy Rising” series by John Ringo. Military Sci-Fi. Building up from first (not so happy) contact to Earth being able to defend itself in space.
Seconding the Troy Rising series. While I happen to think that the way it ended really needs one more book to wrap it up, it is still a very strong trilogy regardless.
Also, John Ringo’s “Looking Glass” series. The first one isn’t much on spaceships, focusing more on Humanity accidentally opening a bunch of portals from Earth to various places across the universe, but the next three books are all space exploration and combat. Also notable as the series where the author writes a preface to people who complained that “the first book was good but it had too much science in it” telling them “repeat after me: SCIENCE fiction.”
John Ringo has a HORRIBLE habit of stopping one (or maybe two) books shy of where you’d like him to… and I still recommend virtually anything he writes!
Peter Grant has a couple of space series. One of them is the Maxwell Saga/Laredo war. It is currently unfinished, but there’s a lot of content. To my mind, a slightly better choice is the Cochrane’s Company trilogy. Its basic plot is mercenaries versus mafia in space. Surprisingly strong.
Favorite space opera movie is Galaxy Quest.
For space opera, check out “In Fury Born”, from David Weber. It checks almost every single box you listed – cozy, compact cast, outrageously competent protagonist, even nore competent enemies Miss Overpowered still struggles to defeat, sexy A.I., lots of it. No xenoanthropology, but everything else is there. It’s only the one book, but it’s an absolutely fantastic favorite of mine.
For space opera, try the Grand Central Arena series by Ryk Spoor. First FTL flight reaches an artificial construct where *all* FTL flights go, and *everyone* is there. Leads include a kickass pilot and a genetically engineered badass. Lots of aliens, action, and it’s just really fun.
Very enjoyable series. A bit strong on the “humans are special” vibes, but it still works.
Sandy figured out how to be on Sydney’s good side with that Princess Bride quote!
Path of the Fury is a great OP romp, with a female main character.
I’m wondering how distracting NYC is will to Sidney. Even with being in an op, you have lots of movie locations/super fights. Billboards that might have her face on them. Lots more fans than her town. (Or possibly bias.)
Books…
I could reccommend M.C.A Hogarth’s Spots the Space Marine: In defense of the fiddler, you know, the book that got a certain game company’s panties in a twist…
Her Earthrise trilogy is suposed to be good, but I haven’t read it, yet.
I have the entire Dreamhealers series, and have read most of them multiple times.
(I have them both in sofcover and as eBook)
And I’m currently working my way through ‘Even the Wingless’, the first of her Prince’s Game series. It’s dark and sometimes gory.
and then there’s her Stardancer series. ‘Furry Star Trek’. Some may want to skip the prequel ‘Alysha’s Fall’. It’s not a pleasant read.
She also posts freebies(shorts, or even complete books that she has serialised) in her patreon.
KZIN WARS by Larry Niven is an enjoyable series.
I love the Known Space series, it has been quite the task to collect, I have almost all of them. Yes the Kizin Wars are super. A fun little fact is that except for “Angel’s Pencil” and maybe one other, none of those stories were written by Niven. Here is an actual example of an author looking at the adage ‘Wrire what you know’, and saying, I don’t know war. I forget the span of years, but it was a good chunk of the known space timeline war opened to other authors who wanted to write one of the kizin conflicts.
Ah, Sydney… ever the idealist. That certainly is the way law enforcement is *supposed* to work…
On Reddit hfy (humanity f*** yeah) there’s a story that starts with P’Thok Eats an Ice Cream. It’s called First Contact.
In three months, he’s done nearly 300 chapters, and it’s some epic, OP, Sci Fi Madness. Pure brilliance.
I just mentioned this series upthread, hadn’t seen your post yet. I just discovered it a while ago, he is posting chapters faster than I can read them. The author is a monster.
Sydney’s getting better at controlling the orbs; she can make them do cosmetic loop-de-loops on the way to her hand!
My space sci-fi recommendation is ‘Will Save the Galaxy for Food” by Ben “Yahtzee” Croshaw.