The 10 Best Sci-Fi Books With Space Battles

Put up your astronaut-gloved dukes.

The Mary Sue

20 books that have had an impact on who you are. One book a day for 20 days. No explanations, no reviews, just book covers.

Day 11 (not really but no one is counting)

#20Covers #Bookstodon #ScienceFiction #HonorHarrington

@Prosaic oh boy do I have a treat for you!
The #HonorHarrington books by #DavidWeber basically this.

https://www.goodreads.com/series/40419-honor-harrington

Honor Harrington Series by David Weber

Harrington, the heroine of the eponymous Honorverse, is an officer in the Royal Manticoran Navy (RMN), the space navy of the Star Kingdom of Manticore....

@joewynne I'm not going to say you *owe* me any, but I'm happy to accept your offer :D

How about something with cider as an inspiration?

Here's my Saganami Cider
(for #HonorHarrington)

1 bottle of hard cider
1 shot barenjager
1 shot amaretto
Lemon Slice(s)
Sparkly water

Simmer the boozy ingredients & lemon

If you feel icky or cold: sip warm

If you want a cocktail: let cool, then pour over ice & fill glass with sparkly water

@shom @Nonya_Bidniss Not exactly a utopia, but David Weber does a hell of a lot of world building in the #HonorHarrington books.

Browsergame von nem Kumpel, angelehnt an die „Military-Science-Fiction“-Romanserie „Honor Harrington“ (https://t1p.de/v2tft) von David Weber.

https://www.battleforhonor.de

#honorharrington #BattleForHonor #browsergames #browsergame #gaming #bildbeschreibung

Honor Harrington – Wikipedia

Finished: The Honor of the Queen
About to start The Short Victorious War

First, some thoughts about Honor. Included below: discussion of religion in SFF. No great spoilers.

I found this a better book than On Basilisk Station. It's a wild ride, and war is hell. I still have trouble keeping up with characters, but Captain Honor Harrington herself is better developed and a much stronger character in this one.

By "still have trouble keeping up with characters", here's an example. There's a major supporting character early in this second book about whom I kept asking myself, "Is this the same character as one of the villainous figures from the last book?" I've now finished the book and I think the answer is "no", but I'm still not quite sure. That's a failure on the part of the writer. I trust he will get better at this.

One other observation.

I am pretty sure the author, David Weber, is himself nonreligious.
Why do I say this?
A major part of the plot of Honor is conflict among Her Majesty's Navy and two planets founded by religious extremists. This includes conflict between the two planets. At various times, one side or another has to give in to what seem to be unreasonable stances from another party, all based on differences in ideology. (The planets have differences among themselves but share a common heritage. The Navy brings a different approach from either.)

When compromises happens, the Navy grins and bears it. Naval characters complain, but accept the necessity for the moment. The various locals, however, complain with phrases like "this goes against everything I believe!"

Come on. Any real religion, especially one capable of shaping an entire society, is about more than one thing. When a religious person makes what seems to be a compromise in one area, that rarely "goes against everything they believe". It probably goes against one thing they believe, and it may be a major thing, but our power to rationalize is nearly infinite. And the thing the locals are compromising on, well, it's an important part of their identity, but I can't see how it's their whole identity. They can find ways to make this work. They don't have to despair that they're giving up their whole identity.

This is a sloppy way of writing about religion, in stereotype, not as a social or spiritual reality.

To Weber's credit, he gives us some local figures who have their misgivings but work through them with time. Those characters are much more full and believable.

I am again grateful for the normal characterization of religion in James SA Corey's The Expanse series. Several characters are religious to various degrees, and it's just a normal thing. There's a Methodist pastor; there are Mormons in Space; and while that might seem weird to some, it's tremendously realistic and refreshing, as so many SF writers assume that religion is something humanity will magically "get over" in a few years. We aren't like that. Humanity will always be religious. That's part of who we are; it always has been and though the forms change over time, the reality does not.

#sf #sff #milSF #honorverse #honorHarrington #reading #davidWeber #theExpanse #jamesSACorey #religion

When you have finished “Uncompromising Honor” but still need one more book where she kicks some Mesan ass. #RMN #HonorHarrington
You could make a decent streaming series out of the #HonorHarrington stories, but is the cgi advanced enough to do Nimitz justice?