I love the Honor Harrington series and I also have bought, but not yet read the books in The Lost Fleet series. Are there any more series of books that deal with space navies in the same vein as the two aboved mentioned series? Thanks!
The Mote In God's Eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. The crux of the novel concerns mankind's first contact with an alien species, but it incidentally includes more "space navy" stuff than you can shake a stick at, so long as raging battles aren't required to garner that appellation.
The Mote In God's Eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. The crux of the novel concerns mankind's first contact with an alien species, but it incidentally includes more "space navy" stuff than you can shake a stick at, so long as raging battles aren't required to garner that appellation.
Seconded, by a long way. One of my top five SF novels ever.
But avoid the sequel, as it's rubbish.
Hope he doesn't speak Yiddish, his name would have an unusual meaning then. I might look into that.Try David Feintuch's Nick Seafort series. It begins with Midshipman's Hope.
No, Seafort is, as I remember it, an Irish Catholic. (Though, in Seafort's future, Catholicism has seriously mutated, taking on some of the most stringent doctrines of Calvinism.)Hope he doesn't speak Yiddish, his name would have an unusual meaning then. I might look into that.
A. Bertram Chandler wrote some very good space navy fiction as well about a character named John Grimes.
A. Bertram Chandler wrote some very good space navy fiction as well about a character named John Grimes.
Woah, that's a name I haven't heard in so long that I'd actually forgotten it entirely until I saw it there....
I'm having a freaky "there is a hole in your mind" moment...
I think the last time I saw one of A Bertram Chandler's books was in my high school library...
The updated version of Yesterday's Children is usually published under the title Starhunt these days. Or at least my copy is. I'm not so sure about the additions (you can tell Gerrold wrote them years later, as tone and style suddenly just shift), but they do give you an actually complete story.and, for psychological complexity to make BEDFORD INCIDENT look like a juvenile,
David Gerrold's YESTERDAY'S CHILDREN (the second version, with the Diane Duane intro, not the really skinny one first published as YESTERDAY'S CHILDREN, and not the VOYAGE OF THE STAR WOLF, which is a really totally different, somewhat inferior thing. )
How good is the Honor Harrington series?
"Do you think we have a chance?"
<3 or 4 pages of political and/or technical ruminations later>
"Yes."
I was referring to Feintuch...tuchus in Yiddish means arse and is often abbreviated to tuch...and Fein you pronounce "fine"...No, Seafort is, as I remember it, an Irish Catholic. (Though, in Seafort's future, Catholicism has seriously mutated, taking on some of the most stringent doctrines of Calvinism.)Hope he doesn't speak Yiddish, his name would have an unusual meaning then. I might look into that.
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