Baen Free Library

There are plenty of places online to get free ebooks, and I’ve tried to point out as many as I could. If you like science fiction, one great spot is Baen Fee Library, if for no other reason than Honor Harrington– the gold standard in military sci-fi.

The Honor of the Queen – Mini Review

The second book I read on my Sony Reader was the second Honor Harrington book by David Weber, The Honor of the Queen. As I mentioned in a previous post, the Honor Harrington series retells the stories of Horatio Hornblower by setting them in the far future in space. In addition, Honor Harrington is a great military sci-fi series and well worth a read by science fiction fans.
This book takes our intrepid heroine into a solar system that is misogynistic and patriarchal, so in addition to the classic military plot, we also have a feminist perspective to the story.
I enjoyed this book, and I think it is my favorite of the HH series, and since there are more than a dozen, that’s saying something.

Mini-Review – On Basilisk Station by David Weber

The first book I read on my Sony Reader was “On Basilisk Station” by David Weber. There were two main reasons for this. 1. I had read it before and liked it and I wanted to be sure that my first book read as an ebook was one I liked. 2. It is available as a free ebook at Baen Books.
David Weber is accounted a master of military science fiction and I would have to concur with that assessment. This is the first book in the Honor Harrington series that now numbers well over a dozen. They are loosely based on the Horatio Hornblower books and there are many parallels beyond the shared initials.
If you like sci-fi books with a hard-assed space captain, then this is a book you will enjoy. If you like plenty of action… ditto. After having read all the books in the series, I will say that they follow the same formula. There is a slow build-up until all hell breaks loose at the end, and you get to find out which of the characters you have come to like gets killed. Still, they are great stories. The writing is crisp. The universe is interesting.
I would have to recommend Honor Harrington to any fans of space science fiction, and this is one of the better books in the series.

The Steel Dragon – Tributes

There are a number homages hidden within the text of The Steel Dragon. I think most of them are so well hidden that a reader wouldn’t notice them. Here are some of them.

Percy Shelley’s Ozymandias: I love this poem, so in the third book of the series, I had the characters come across an ancient monument with a very similar inscription.

The Lord of the Rings: There are several little tributes in the story, the most obvious is the title of the third book– The Two Dragons. Besides being obvious, because there are two dragons in the story, it is a tip of the hat to the second volume of The Lord of the Rings– The Two Towers.

Stephen King: I wanted a little Stephen King in my book, so I added him. Most of the characters are not patterened, at least physically, after any particular person. I used Stephen King’s picture as a reference for one character– a wizard.

Honor Harrington: I love the Honor Harrington books by David Weber. I had already created two characters named Hero and Hertzal, so when they needed a sister, Honor seemed a perfect name.

The Princess Bride: I added one word as a tribute to this great movie– Inconceivable!

Hamish Macbeth: This great British show was a source of inspiration for my characters who were police constables. Because of this, I added a little dog, like Wee Jock, to the story. I of course named him Hamish.

Nellie Bly: The girl reporter Nellie Bly is a hero of mine and I used her last name as the last name for my main character. If I write a fourth book in the series, I plan to have a character who is a girl reporter.

Edgar Rice Burroughs: There are dinosoaurs in the story. If that’s not enough, I had a character read a book that was very much like an ERB story.

Sherlock Holmes: There are a string of murders in the book. I set one on a foggy waterfront as a deliberate tribute to A. Conan Doyle’s hero and I gave the inspector a double-billed hat and a pipe.

E. Gary Gygax: I plotted out all three books together as one continuous story. I only added one chapter and that was a dungeon crawl. This was a tribute to the creator of D&D.

William Shakespeare: I have loved the name Hero for a woman ever since I watched Much Ado About Nothing. I had decided I would name a character Hero. The fact that she is a twin is also due to my love of the Bard and his penchant for twins.

Tom Swift: I used the Shopton as the name of the town where some of my characters lived before the story begins. Shopton, NY was the home of Tom Swift.