Yellow Eyes (Posleen War)

BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $7.99

Usually ships in 24 hours

By: John Ringo and Tom Kratman
(28 customer reviews)
Buy New: $7.99


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

EDITORIAL REVIEW

The Posleen are coming and the models all say the same thing: Without the Panama Canal, the US is doomed to starvation and defeat. Despite being overstretched preparing to defend the US, the military sends everything it has left: A handful of advanced Armored Combat Suits, rejuvenated veterans from the many decades that Panama was a virtual colony and three antiquated warships. Other than that, the Panamanians are on their own.  Replete with detailed imagery of the landscape, characters and politics that have made the jungle-infested peninsula a Shangri-La for so many over the years, Yellow Eyes is a hard-hitting look at facing a swarming alien horde with not much more than wits and guts. Fortunately for the human race, the Panamanians, and the many veterans that think of it as a second home, have plenty of both.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Baen
Pub. Date: 26th August 2008
Catalog: Book
Media: Mass Market Paperback
Number Of Pages: 848
Ean: 9781416555711
Isbn: 1416555714

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Awesome!
~ Written on Jul 21, 2009. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

What can I say ... I LOVED THIS BOOK! I couldn't put it down and spent most of a night sitting up and reading it, alternately laughing and cursing out the Darhel (and occasionally the Aldenata). It was wonderful to experience the Posleen themselves to a greater extent, to get more of a feeling of what they are all about - Guanamarioch was a wonderful character and one you couldn't help but relate to (but oh, that caiman attack ... *shudders*). I also enjoyed the interplay with the battleships USS Des Moines and Salem - that was an inspiration on behalf of whomever came up with that idea.

I could go on and on, really, but I'm sure many reviewers much more eloquent than I have summed up the basic plot, so I'll just add this - if you haven't already started on the Legacy of the Aldenata series, you better get going, just so you can get to this book! You won't want to miss out on what everyone is raving about, will you??

Can't seem to finish this book
~ Written on May 25, 2009. out of 4 users found this review helpful.

This book still sits on the shelf of my local Borders where, from time to time, I pick it up to read with my coffee. I keep thinking that since this is a Sci-Fi book I haven't read yet, I should see if its worth reading. By the time I remember why I didn't buy it the last time I skimmed it, I realize I've just wasted more effort in trying to read this book.

This book is a clear case for the existence of brick and mortar stores. The ability to browse this book saved me from purchasing it. If I had relied solely on the Publisher's Weekly review, I'd have bought it and been disappointed.

The ship who sang, danced, and kicked Posleen Butt
~ Written on May 25, 2009. 2 out of 2 users found this review helpful.

This military SF page-turner is a little like what you might get if you combine Anne McCaffrey's "The Ship who sang" series and C.S. Forester's book "Death to the French" in the context of the invasion of Earth by a hostile race called the Posleen. Although this was one of the more recently written novels in John Ringo's Posleen invasion universe, also known as the "Legacy of the Aldenata" series, it is one of the earlier books by chronological sequence. It tells the story of the defence of the Panama Canal region by Panamanian and US forces, including a heavy cruiser which becomes sentient, against the Posleen invasion.

The series began around the turn of the Millennium, when the galactic federation contacted Earth with some awful news and a terrible choice. An aggressive species called the Posleen, to whom all other creatures are merely food, is rampaging through the galaxy, and Earth is in their path. If humans will act as mercenaries against them, the galactic federation will provide weapons and technical assistance. Accepting the deal means humans will be cannon fodder. Refusing would mean that when they arrive we will be Posleen fodder.

The series is sometimes called "Legacy of Aldenata" because the galactic situation is the result of meddling in the genes of most intelligent species by a now-vanished race called the Aldenata. The Aldenata turned most of the peoples of the galaxy into vegetarians, unable to kill. The only species in the galaxy who apparently escaped this meddling and can therefore fight wars are Posleen and humans - which is why the galactic federation want us as mercenaries.

But the Aldenata's meddling has not made every race into nice people. In particular, galactic politics and economics are dominated by a powerful race called the Darhel. The principal Darhel character in this book openly states that the Aldenata's forcible genetic conversion of his people from warrior carnivores to vegetarian pacifists has compelled them to live a lie and made them hate what they have become.

The ruthless and evil leaders of the Darhel see humans as a threat to their position. Their plan is to use humans and Posleen to virtually annihilate each other: they intend to give humanity just enough support to enable us to eventually defeat the Posleen, but the Darhel also set out to sabotage the human war effort and reduce it to the minimum level required for the costliest, most narrow victory possible. They aim to deliberately ensure that several billion humans get killed and eaten by Posleen in the process. Although the Darhel cannot kill anyone themselves without going permanently catatonic, they can and do hire human assassins to eliminate anyone who openly opposes them, might make the human resistance to the Posleen too successful, or finds out too much about their plans.


At the start of the book, shortly before the invasion, the US has realised that the consequences for their ability to feed their people if the Posleen get control of the Panama canal will be dire, so they despatch what forces they can spare to help the Panamanians defend themselves and the canal. But the heroes and heroines of the book, American and Panamanian (and one or two galactics) have no idea of the lengths to which their supposed Darhel allies, working with corrupt elements of the Panamanian government, the United Nations, and the American State Department, will go to sabotage the human war effort.

Fortunately many of the Panamanian people, and the US soldiers and sailors fighting with them, have much more courage and resourcefulness than the Darhel and their treacherous co-conspirators realise. And the biggest obstacle to a Posleen victory in Panama is something which no rational person would have expected. One of three old battlewagons allocated to support the Panamanians, the heavy cruiser USS Des Moines, really does have a mind of her own ...


This novel fits into the sequence of eleven published or planned books in the Posleen/legacy of Aldenata Universe as follows:

The series began with three stories in four volumes following the war against the Posleen invasion, particularly from a US perspective. The four books of that quartet are:

1) A Hymn Before Battle
2) Gust Front
3) When the Devil Dances
4) Hell's Faire

(The first two of these books are stand-alone novels, but "When the Devil Dances" and "Hell's Faire," are essentially one story in two volumes.)

This is the second of two books by John Ringo and Tom Kratman set at the same time as "Gust Front" but in other theatres of war, which are

5) Watch on the Rhine (Germany), and
6) Yellow Eyes (Panama).

Then there is the Cally O'Neal quartet, set a couple of decades after the Posleen invasion of Earth. This describes the resistance to the Darhel, let by a covert organisation called the Bane Sidhe, particularly from the viewpoint of the spy and assassin Cally O'Neal. These four books are

7) Cally's War
8) Sister Time
9) Honor of the Clan
10) Eye of the Storm (forthcoming)

Finally, the chronologically last book in the sequence, set many centuries later, is

11) Hero.

a book which reverses the viewpoint. About a thousand years after the events of the first ten books in the series, humans have finally taken a terrible vengeance on the Darhel. "Hero" is set some centuries after the uprising and pogrom against the Darhel, and members of that species have become a despised minority which is trying to slowly earn back a position of being accepted and trusted by the other races of the galaxy. "Hero" actually has a Darhel in the title role.

Provided that you are not squeamish or the least bit prudish, I can recommend "Yellow Eyes" and indeed the whole series.

One of the best
~ Written on Nov 30, 2008. 2 out of 3 users found this review helpful.

First, I'm biased. I'm active-duty infantry (101st Airborne), a two-tour Iraq vet, politically am every bit as right-wing as John and Tom, and I occasionally correspond with both.

That being said, this was even better than "Watch on the Rhine", and I LOVED WOTR. Chronologically it happens during, as there is a hint when the Waffen-SS are listening to the Panamanian choir on the radio.

There are parts of this novel that made me laugh. There are parts that made me cry. In terms of human emotion, it's the deepest of the series across a broader spectrum. We rarely get in the heads of any other character in the Posleen Universe as deeply as we do this time, well, except for Mike O'Neal who I really think is John's alter ego. Speaking as one, there are few college-educated sergeants who think we can't handle a battalion command in combat without too much crossover training.

The sad footnote is that the USS Des Moines, ex-CA134, was scrapped in Texas after the book was published, efforts to save her as a museum ship having failed. That is just one more reason to think wistfully of a world where the big-gun warships sail again, and the space aliens have something that would make my back and knees work again.

Really?
~ Written on Nov 28, 2008. 5 out of 11 users found this review helpful.

I am stunned to see the number of five star reviews for this drivel. The humor is juvenile, characters cardboard, and action ho-hum. Toss in the odd pseudo-intellectual political rants and you have a memorably bad novel. Gives pulp a bad name.

SIMILAR ITEMS:

Search:
International
UK US
Browse Categories