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Edwin Amis, new commander of the Eridani Light Horse, faces a tough decision: Should he openly defy the First Lord of the Star League? Sun-Tzu Liao, the First Lord, has sent Star League troops as "peace-keepers" to the St. Ives Compact to prevent open rebellion by angry citizens - but they're not seeking peace.

Amis knows the mission is only a guise for reclaiming territory for the Capellan Confederation, and he's ready to station counter-forces on Milos, close to the heart of the Capellan capital. But on Milos, things are already escalating - Death Commando Chen Shao and his ruthless partner, Nessa Ament, have secretly murdereed a dissident's family in cold blood. Now, in what could erupt into full-scale war, both forces are at each other's throats.

280 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2000

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Thomas S. Gressman

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5 stars
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4 stars
69 (30%)
3 stars
84 (37%)
2 stars
40 (17%)
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4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Julie.
255 reviews8 followers
April 11, 2025
There isn’t a plot. There are a few decent action scenes, but this is a totally ambiguous book.
Profile Image for Sam Graham.
14 reviews1 follower
November 8, 2017
I don't often give up on reading a book. Usually I just start reading another book and leave the original languishing in a pile, waiting for me to resume it in a year or five. It's about the only way I end up with a new favourite bookmark. There's an entire archeology of books, with a genealogy of bookmarks in some sort of Tolkien-esque "ever diminishing" hierarchy of favouriteness, from the great Ur-Bookmark of Teenage Sam down to the folded envelope I'm using in my latest read.

Which brings me to "Dagger Point" by Thomas S Gressman.

It isn't going to keep the latest generation of bookmark ensconced in its hallowed pages for the next decade, it also isn't going to be finished any time soon, nay, this book is destined for greater things, the heady halls of The Books I Have Given Up On.

Admittedly, I didn't start with high hopes, it's a Battletech book, y'know franchise military sci-fi from the guys who couldn't afford the Warhammer 40K or Star Wars authors.

I was only reading it because I bought it by accident - I'd made a pile of books to buy at the bookshop, and it was resting on a crate of books I had no interest in... and I picked this one up along with the bottom of the stack of books I actually wanted. D'oh.

I managed to make it, through gritted teeth, to page 169, before I could take no more.

The gem that finally made me give up however is worthy of repetition, it's such a magnificent piece of terrible sci-fi...

"In all the years I've been a soldier, and all the worlds I've been on," he said quietly to himself, "I'll never get used to seeing the sun come up in the west."

Now, granted, maybe that isn't too egregious to many of you, but it's supposedly a bloody sci-fi book. Military sci-fi to be granted, which generally has precious little science in it. Even so, it doesn't take a degree in astrophysics to figure out that the sun rising in a different direction looks absolutely identical from the surface of a spherical object.

Knowing which way is north is generally, y'know, notoriously hard without some clear indicators, and the difference between the sun being to the east rather than the west, even if you know that? Well, whoopy-do, it's on the left rather than the right, or the right rather than the left... depending on what way you're facing.

That's right, the grand difference between the sun rising in the east and the sun rising in the west can be simulated right here on earth by... turning around and facing the other direction.

Do you think that experience would be so unsettling that it would be the ONE thing you didn't ever get used to on alien worlds?

If that's the case then your sci-fi universe is pretty damn boring... oh, wait, going by the rest of the book, it may just be.
Profile Image for Rocky Sunico.
2,277 reviews25 followers
October 21, 2019
This was a tricky read since it had enough decent action and narrative complexity to make it a great book but in the end it just felt largely okay? I guess it may have something to do with how unsatisfying the ending was as the book wanted to press the rigors of war and how not all military actions actually matter in the greater scheme of things. We had the Eridani Light Horse still out of their element in a post-Huntress period and you have the Capellan side of things feeling very stereotypically evil and insidious.

A lot of interesting mechs though. I'm always game for that.
Profile Image for Brian Turner.
707 reviews12 followers
October 13, 2018
The blurb on the back sounds promising, but the story fails to deliver.
The Eridani Light Horse regiment are sent to Milos, which has been taken over by Sun Tzu Liao as part of his Xin Sheng movement.
The populace seem quite happy with that state of affairs, ensure the ELH know about it...and that's about it.

There's a few mech battles, some fairly tense moments with a sniper on the loose, but as a novel this doesn't really go anywhere or achieve anything.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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