Favorite space combat books.
iamnotaparakeet
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Joined: 31 Jul 2007
Age: 39
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I would like this thread to be about space combat books, favorites and recommendations.
I have always liked fictional works dealing with the idea of space warfare, such as the television series Roughnecks: The Starship Trooper Chronicles; Space: Above & Beyond; etc, Basically Heinlein style works. In books dealing with this subject I have found these to be my favorites:
Tambu, by Robert Asprin.
Ender's Game, by Orson Scott Card.
Starship Troopers, by Robert Heinlein.
And currently I've just started reading Star Strike by Ian Douglas which seems to be fairly okay-ish. It seems like it could almost be a background story for the computer game Sins of a Solar Empire.
On Basilisk Station, the first Honor Harrington book, by David Weber was pretty good, but rather too serious and too heavy on tech-wank for my liking.
The Vorkosigan Saga is pretty good, but not all of its stories deal with space combat. It's about one fifth space combat, and four fifths science fiction intrigue thrillers. In terms of space combat, the books in the series that deal with that are Shards of Honour (in the omnibus book Cordelia's Honour), The Warrior's Apprentice and The Vor Game (in the omnibus book Young Miles).
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iamnotaparakeet
Veteran
Joined: 31 Jul 2007
Age: 39
Gender: Male
Posts: 25,091
Location: 0.5 Galactic radius
The Vorkosigan Saga is pretty good, but not all of its stories deal with space combat. It's about one fifth space combat, and four fifths science fiction intrigue thrillers. In terms of space combat, the books in the series that deal with that are Shards of Honour (in the omnibus book Cordelia's Honour), The Warrior's Apprentice and The Vor Game (in the omnibus book Young Miles).
Thanks for the recommendations, I think I've seen a couple of those books' titles at a store nearby.
What I think would be neat though, for a science fiction novel, is to focus on using physics that we know today and technologies which are actually existent rather than making more and more impossible devices, such as FTL drives and gravity generators, and instead using things such as centrifuges for replacing gravity, nuclear reactors for powering spacecraft when traveling too far from a star to use solar panels, etc. In other words, not a complete "tech w*k" but use what we have and know is possible in order to accomplish interplanetary colonization and combat. The author of Star Strike seems to like doing the opposite of that approach, unfortunately.
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