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Sentenced to desk duty after an unorthodox but successful maneuver, flight engineer Peter Raeder takes a risky assignment on the fringes of Federation Space rather than languish away in an office

272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

5 people are currently reading
115 people want to read

About the author

James Doohan

20 books10 followers
Canadian actor, best known for playing Scotty, the irascible but lovable Scottish Flight Engineer for the Starship Enterprise in various Star Trek series and films - See more at: http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/...

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5 stars
94 (31%)
4 stars
95 (31%)
3 stars
85 (28%)
2 stars
23 (7%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,407 reviews60 followers
September 30, 2020
Good 2nd book in the trilogy. Nice action and pacing moves the story along quickly. Enjoyable read. Recommended
Profile Image for Phil P.
53 reviews
December 26, 2019
Okay, so I dont know if this is just the fact that I was losing interest, or if the writing was actually hard to follow and discombobulated, but this was not nearly as good as the first one. Simple plot, raeder, knott and the majority of the invincible crew go undercover to mess with some trades between pirates and the Mollies. Basically a pirate novel with lazers and stuff. I'm not reading the next one. Sorry James Doohan, may you rest in peace. I'm glad you stuck mostly to acting.
Profile Image for David.
437 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2021
Quite the muddle. 'Space Opera'? No not really. Crew doesn't actually make it into space at all until halfway through. Even then very little to do with battles or conflict resolution. Plot seemed all but buried beneath a pile of dreck. A great deal of time is spent attempting to build characters who simply turn out shallow and hollow with a taint of misogyny. Struggled to make it all the way through.
Profile Image for Nathan Miller.
563 reviews2 followers
April 12, 2022
In the continuing story of Commander Raeder, the authors continue to give us a taste of something that might be "what might Star Trek look like if it were real life?" We get more worldbuilding, including more about just what the heck is up with the Mollies -- which I felt was handled sort of ham-handedly in the first book. I had more fun reading this one than I did the first one.
263 reviews3 followers
October 15, 2021
Enjoyable

While the privateer plot has been used often, I do not recall it being used in this way before. A well thought out and written book, with a growing number of characters who are becoming more developed.
Profile Image for Mark Hartman.
508 reviews3 followers
May 7, 2025
Okay continuation of the first book but not as good. Peter Raeder has a choice to go to earth or lead a group to harry Mollie shipping. Still not as good as the first book and hopefully the last book in the trilogy is better.
Profile Image for Bryan.
326 reviews7 followers
December 2, 2014
Makes L. Ron Hubbard's Battlefield Earth seem like an epic!

The story is interesting enough... very simple and one-dimensional, perhaps. But isn't this science fiction? This was Aristotlean, not even Newtonian. That only makes it about 500 years out of date.

Honestly, you can read this book and imagine that the ships are ocean-going vessels instead of space vessels, and it will work just as well. And make more sense!

In this book, space is very small. Pirates are afraid to sit still in space for 6 hours because somebody might happen along.

In this book, space is not frictionless. Spaceships stop moving when the engines are cut off. Unwise pirate ships blow out their engines because they were redlining them to maintain too much speed.

In this book, good guys are superior in every way to the bad guys. Not only are the bad guys repugnant and vile, they are also stupid. They can be overcome by such simple means that the authors, after having spent 50+ pages setting up the current obstacle, then have the heroes overcome the obstacle in a fraction of those pages.

(In one section, the good guys overcome a female pirate who is VERY TOUGH and KNOWS HOW TO FIGHT, as compared to the previous dumb male pirate that they struggled with. Anyways, the authors skipped the skirmish. They're getting ready and warning themselves it won't be easy, and then the paragraph cuts to the next scene and they're locking up the female pirate captain, all the while telling each other "wow, that was a tough battle. She really knew how to fight.")

OK, so for James Doohan this was better than I expected. But for S. M. Stirling, I certainly expected better.

Approach with caution. 1.5 stars.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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