You get the picture!Originally on https://www.wcnews.com/falsecolors.shtml
CIC: Will we be seeing a lot of returning characters?
Keith: Jason, Sparks, Admiral Tolwyn and his nephew . . . the leader of the Landreich (whose name eludes me) (...)
Wow... amazing to see such a big mistake, on the cover of a book, had gone unnoticed...Originally posted by Bandit LOAF
William Keith is Andrew's brother -- Baen screwed up the cover of the book (...)
Originally at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...ies/ref=pm_dp_ln_b_10/103-1160512-4701407[/i]
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
David Weber provides intergalactic thrills and political intrigue in this far-flung military space adventure, continuing where In Enemy Hands left off. The People's Republic has publicly executed Honor Harrington--or have they? While the Star Kingdom swears revenge, Honor (alive and kicking) plans escape from the prison planet of Hell. Weber's extensive knowledge of military protocol combined with deep technical exploration make for a highly detailed book, yet he avoids bogging down in it. His great storytelling skills keep this book racing along like an action-adventure movie. Fans of Star Wars and old-fashioned seafaring tales will find lots to their liking here, as will those looking for a future setting in which women play an equal role. If you're new to the Honor series, start with On Basilisk Station, the first of Commander Honor Harrington's adventures. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From Booklist
Each successive Honor Harrington novel bulks larger than the last, but then, so does its audience. Honor, though, spends much of this book on the lean and hungry side as she organizes a mass escape from a prison planet aptly known as Hell; now permanently shy an arm and an eye, she is definitely physically reduced, anyhow. While Honor and a handful of survivors of the climax of In Enemy Hands try to organize history's biggest prison break (of about 300,000 POWs), three other subplots keep the... read more
Originally posted by Bandit LOAF
Andrew got a free copy of a Bolo book out of it... and then he died. So it goes.
Originally posted by Bandit LOAF
Yeah, well, Baen had more "important" things to think about... *cough*Honor*cough*.
Originally posted by Bandit LOAF
Grecko was short, though... and the re-incarnation of Patton.