I've read 'em all, and I'm rereading them all right now in anticipation of the new book, out in March. (March 3rd, according to Amazon.)
I like all of the exposition - it makes the universe around the "action" parts seem more real. And as far as I can tell, Weber never contradicts himself, so that helps, too. I've been tinkering on and off with building a Honorverse RPG, so that material helps there, too. (And yes, I'm aware that there already is a game of sorts - but it plays more like Starfleet Battles, and I'm looking at a more D20-ish setup.)
Obviously, I highly recommend the series, and "In Fury Born", a standalone novel that Weber did. It (well, the unexpanded version, "Path of the Fury", anyway) was my introduction to his writing, actually.
I'll also throw out a recommendation for David Feintuch's Seafort Saga, which starts with "Midshipman's Hope", although with a warning - that series is excellent, but reads to me like, what if David Weber HATED Honor Harrington and made bad things always happen to her.
I like all of the exposition - it makes the universe around the "action" parts seem more real. And as far as I can tell, Weber never contradicts himself, so that helps, too. I've been tinkering on and off with building a Honorverse RPG, so that material helps there, too. (And yes, I'm aware that there already is a game of sorts - but it plays more like Starfleet Battles, and I'm looking at a more D20-ish setup.)
Obviously, I highly recommend the series, and "In Fury Born", a standalone novel that Weber did. It (well, the unexpanded version, "Path of the Fury", anyway) was my introduction to his writing, actually.
I'll also throw out a recommendation for David Feintuch's Seafort Saga, which starts with "Midshipman's Hope", although with a warning - that series is excellent, but reads to me like, what if David Weber HATED Honor Harrington and made bad things always happen to her.
