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Jessica Keller has a reputation as a maverick commander. It almost got her court martialed. Now it has gotten her a new command in an obscure sector, with orders to ignite a new front in the eternal war.

But her old nemesis, Imperial Admiral Emmerich Wachturm, stands in her way.

Worlds will fall before their feud ends, but only if she can forge her crew of strangers into a weapon. Otherwise, disaster looms.

229 pages, Paperback

First published May 5, 2015

126 people are currently reading
650 people want to read

About the author

Blaze Ward

325 books90 followers
Blaze Ward writes science fiction in the Alexandria Station universe as well as The Collective. He also write fantasy stories with several characters and series, from an alternate Rome to epic high fantasy in the desert. You can find out more at his website www.blazeward.com, as well as Facebook, here, and other places.

Blaze’s works are available as ebooks, paper, and audio, and can be found at a variety of online vendors (Kobo, Amazon, and others). His newsletter comes out quarterly, and you can also follow his blog on his website. He really enjoys interacting with fans, and looks forward to any and all questions—even ones about his books!

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5 stars
186 (41%)
4 stars
178 (40%)
3 stars
62 (13%)
2 stars
18 (4%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Laz the Sailor.
1,799 reviews80 followers
March 18, 2018
This story is similar to the HH, Kris, and even Vatta series. If you liked them, you'll like this.

In this series, the author skips the entire apprenticeship and development process and introduces us to an experienced ship captain who knows how to get the best from her people, and how to pull a rabbit out of her hat when necessary. There are over-arcing politics which will drive the series.

One part I liked is that more than half of the characters are women. There are some cultural legacies to overcome, but once in uniform, gender doesn't come into play. Very nice.

With both Longknife and Vatta off on tangents, I think I'll read a few more of these to see where they lead.
Profile Image for Carolyn F..
3,491 reviews51 followers
March 23, 2018
What a great book! Loved the battle scenes, we got glimpses of some of the main characters, including the fabulous captain, Jessica. So good! I'm requesting the rest of the series from the library. They bought this book quickly so maybe they'll get the rest quickly too. I would recommend this book for any sci-fi fans.
Profile Image for Betsy.
637 reviews234 followers
February 26, 2018
I was a little skeptical of this book at first. It seemed it was just going to be a pale imitation of On Basilisk Station. But I kept with it and enjoyed it quite a bit. Sure it echoes Honor Harrington, but I suspect that many authors borrow inspiration from others. Auberon doesn't quite measure up to David Weber, but it was a very enjoyable, and gripping, adventure. The characters and the world building still lack a little flesh, and history, but that may be rectified in future volumes of the series. The plot was pretty good. I was engaged enough to read it in two days.
Profile Image for Wyrdness.
499 reviews38 followers
September 7, 2024
This had a bunch of elements I should have enjoyed (a crew featuring multiple intelligent & capable women, political intrigue, space battles, and a rivalry between enemies trying to strategically out-think each other), and yet it never managed to connect with me.

I spent the first 40% of the book wondering when anything was going to happen. Which isn't strictly fair. There was stuff going on, but it amounted to little more than info-dumps introducing the major protagonists and antagagonists of the series, and it didn't flow as well as it could have if these characters and their interactions had come up organically as the story progressed.



At 60% I made the mistake of putting the book down for a moment and it took me 4 days to convince myself to pick it back up to finish the less than 100 pages left. Which I did only because I didn't have anything better to read at the time.

I don't think this was a truly awful book, but it lacked a feeling of depth and tension to the writing that failed to spark any enthusiasm or interest for the events within. There was no element of genuine surprise or mystery for me to anticipate and so everything felt very flat and one-note.
Profile Image for Per Gunnar.
1,313 reviews74 followers
April 19, 2020
ry. However, I found it rather poorly implemented.

The first couple of books where quite alright. Keller was introduced, there was quite a bit of nice space combat and overall it looked promising. They never managed to reach above the 3 out of 5 stars mark though. Later in the series, quite a few books never managed to reach above 2 out of 5 stars for me.

There were quite a bit of political asshattery in these first books as well but luckily during the course of the series the asshats where given the ass whooping they deserved.

However, in book 4 the author started to cater for certain segments of readers and the political bullshit and poorly hidden preaching took a turn for the worse.

From then on the series became very uneven, to me at least. Strange politics where intermixed with the good parts for the story and the good parts where not really that good to begin with. The military action, world building and strategy is very far indeed from the upper echelon of authors like David Weber, Doug Dandridge or Christopher G. Nuttall just to mention a few.

When the “real” enemy was introduced later in the series some of the actions, like “diplomatic” missions to enemy worlds and the reaction of the people on these worlds just became nonsensical. Doug Dandridge made a much better job of introducing and fighting this particular kind of enemy for instance.

So unfortunately this series was a bit of a downer for me.
Profile Image for astaliegurec.
984 reviews
July 30, 2020
I was reading a book that turned out to be a spin-off of Blaze Ward’s “Jessica Keller” series and decided I really needed to read this series before continuing the spin-off. In general, I’m pleased with his 2015 novel "Jessica Keller, Book 1: Auberon." The universe is interesting, the writing good, the plot fast-paced, and, mostly, the characterizations fine. I’d like to say that, occasionally, the space operaness gets a bit excessive. But, that would be silly of me. Unfortunately, my one significant issue is that a few of the characters ARE just silly. Specifically, there are a couple of engineers the protagonist uses for “dirty tricks” that just come across as childish. And, no engineer on a naval space vessel should ever be characterized like that. Other than that, the only other thing I can come up with is that the prose tends to go a bit over-the-top with unnecessary (and actually counter-productive) descriptions. Officially, I’m rating the book at a Very Good 4 stars out of 5. If I could, I’d drop it half a star to 3-1/2 stars. A light, easy, fast read.
Profile Image for Eric Cooley.
91 reviews2 followers
April 24, 2019
Start of a SciFi pulp

This is the first book of the Keller series.
It starts at the point our heroine just saved her republic's rear. Already a captain she is given an assignment to harass the RAN her nation enemy.

It has a feel like the Honor Harrington books. This is a good start, but not as good as David Weber's series. Don't get me wrong, this is a good series by a pretty good author. Just not someone yet at the height of their capabilities. I look forward to seeing the series grow.

This had some really good humor especially by her mischief engineers. In that respect I look forward to seeing it grow.
346 reviews
July 31, 2025
I generally don’t like or read military fiction. However, Ward’s well-crafted prose and character development overcome my aversion to the subject matter. I grew to really like the characters, especially Jessica Keller. Now there’s a little nagging voice in the back of my mind nagging that nobody gets every decision right. There’s a hint that she and her crew mates took a beating in a battle that predates this novel, so maybe in subsequent books in the series she’ll step back from being a goddess and become a mere mortal.
Profile Image for Paul Hancock.
162 reviews21 followers
September 3, 2017
Ladies in space kicking ass! Actually its ladies and gents in space kicking ass. However with most of the scifi that I read having such a poor gender balance for the main characters, having so many women (ie a 50/50 balance) as main characters really stood out. The story was also quite good. This was obviously a setup for a longer arc space-opera but the story holds it's own and I really enjoyed the read.

More please.
60 reviews1 follower
January 16, 2018
A cross between Captain Picard and Honor Harrington

A natural leader with strategic instincts. The book introduces Jessica, a nonconformist, hard driving captain in her element with little oversight and a target rich environment. Enjoyable reading. Could have used additional background on ideologies and the source of the long war. There were probably a dozen typos a careful editor would have caught.
Highly recommend reading this book.
Profile Image for William Howe.
1,800 reviews87 followers
September 22, 2017
Very nice

A tasty mil-sf novel. Good characters, well considered plot, clean writing.

A minor quibble: science officer? Sounds too much like Star Trek when really it was either intel or sensors doing the job. The concept of 'military' seemed thin at times.

I am going to buy the sequel right now. Strongest recommendation I can give.
Profile Image for Joy.
1,194 reviews18 followers
December 5, 2023
Military SF with woman authors and/or characters is very much my jam, and this book pushed the buttons without actually being an extremely good book? It had tight plotting and only a few cringey characters. It's a little too male-gaze-y for me, really, and the worldbuilding isn't super duper, but was it fun? Were there cool space battles and stuff? Yes!
14 reviews1 follower
October 28, 2024
Absolutely worth your time.

Space opera at its best. Blaze is an author who delivers. This series is excellent, leading you on a superb journey with a truly grand cast of characters that you easily visualize into a story that you will want to follow with abandon. Love it. Highly recommend this story and, this writer.
Profile Image for Charl.
1,507 reviews7 followers
June 30, 2017
I liked it! It had the same "feel" as Weber's Harrington stories, while still being fresh.

Other reviewers complained about Keller being a "Mary Sue", but I didn't see it. Either it's not really there, or it's not obvious to me.

I'll be reading more of the series.
88 reviews
May 26, 2019
Big fan of this series

If you like strong female leads in a somewhat lighter military space opera then you are in the right place. Think Kris Longknife without a famous family or as many resources. Bootstrap leader
179 reviews2 followers
July 11, 2017
Nice space war book with a strong female lead. Honor Harrington fans will probably enjoy it.
Profile Image for Aaron Hubble.
Author 8 books5 followers
February 25, 2018
Really enjoyed this books. Interesting space battle tactics that engaged my imagination. A little on the serious side, with not much comic relief, but that's my only complaint.
1,628 reviews12 followers
September 30, 2018
4 stars. Pretty good beginning to a series about a female space captain a la Harrington
7 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2019
Space Navy at it's best.

I don't give 5 stars, but I did this time, As good as Gorden R. Dickson, Robert Heinlein and David Drake. Watch out Honor Harrington and LT O'Leary.
68 reviews
September 7, 2019
Fun Read

Kinda reminded me a bit of Horatio Hornblower - just a bit over the top. Mostly fun, but hard to swallow with be straight face. Don't look for Admiral Harrington here...
38 reviews
January 30, 2020
Not bad, but paint by numbers. It's told competently enough, but the story and characters are very clichéd. If you've read some other military sci-fi books you've seen it all before.
Profile Image for Mark.
Author 100 books232 followers
April 28, 2020
I actually liked this. It's science fiction at its best, and now look forward to the rest of this series.
19 reviews
October 20, 2022
Excellent space opera!

Going back to this series after some time, appreciating the parallel with Honor Harrington. Also appreciating crisp effective clear writing.
18 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2023
Blaze ward delivers

I haven't read a bad book by this man. Tight stories, great action. Love the characters. I am reading this all out of order and still enjoying every word.
Profile Image for Deborah Gebhardt.
891 reviews5 followers
February 25, 2017
I received the book for free through Goodreads Giveaways. This book was my introduction to Blaze Ward and the war between the Republic of Aquitaine Navy (RAN) and the Freiburg Empire, and I would like to know more about this. Auberon was a fast, easy, exciting read. I'll now have to read Auberon's two sequels.
Profile Image for Sarah.
602 reviews5 followers
September 1, 2015
If you like military science fiction this is a pretty good read. The dynamics on the ship were well written as were the politics behind the scenes. I like the main character and I like that she has her own mentor and support. I would have liked a little more perspective from the enemy hero as it was like a showdown between two brilliant officers. I was also expecting a little more fallout and was disappointed that it ended almost too easily. I'm hoping there will be more books to follow and we'll get to see some conflict between Jessica and those that are her enemies in her own world. I think it would make for an exciting read.
Profile Image for Anne Martin.
706 reviews14 followers
December 28, 2015
It is a war book and I was disappointed. I expected something different, with so many women involved in that ship... but no, it's only a war book. The strategy Jessica uses is unclear, as anyway the ways she has to use it do not exist. Jessica, as a character, does not have anything special. Neither does her nemesis, Emmerich.
I checked a lot of military sites... A woman officer is to be called Madam, never Sir. I was surprised by the names too. A lot of them are yugoslavian, a surprising amount. How come?
1,434 reviews9 followers
July 11, 2015
Blaze Ward has two star empires at war. Jessica Keller is assigned command of a small flotilla headed by the Auberon (ebook from Amazon) to make trouble in the outskirt systems of their enemy. While the systems are lightly defended, they have to make enough noise to cause a stir in that empire. Luckily she has some smart people working for her. Edge of the seat excitement with some neat mischief ploys to bring a laugh. Add in politics and you have a wonderful tale. Review printed by Philadelphia Weekly Press
Profile Image for Kathy.
336 reviews9 followers
August 3, 2016
After winning book three of this series as a Goodreads First Read, I decided I should read the previous two books first, and I certainly wasn't disappointed. Auberon is a thoroughly enjoyable space adventure, with battles reminiscent of Ender's Game and a good smattering of politics and personalities to keep it engaging. I enjoyed seeing Keller work and enjoyed getting to know the cast. Definitely worth a read.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews

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