With the aid of a sentient battle computer from before the collapse of interstellar civilization, Raj Whitehall has come close to reuniting the entire planet of Bellevue. Raj is loved by the people, who hold him in awe, but the half-mad jealousy and fear of his emperor is about to force Raj to revolt or face death by torture.
Stephen Michael Stirling is a French-born Canadian-American science fiction and fantasy author. Stirling is probably best known for his Draka series of alternate history novels and the more recent time travel/alternate history Nantucket series and Emberverse series.
MINI AUTO-BIOGRAPHY: (personal website: source)
I’m a writer by trade, born in France but Canadian by origin and American by naturalization, living in New Mexico at present. My hobbies are mostly related to the craft. I love history, anthropology and archaeology, and am interested in the sciences. The martial arts are my main physical hobby.
The human galactic federation is in ruins, and the worlds have devolved to various levels of barbarism. On the planet Bellevue, which is at about the early nineteenth century in development, a young officer named Raj Whitehall and his friend venture into the catacombs under the capital. There, they find an ancient battlecomputer named Center. With Center’s help, Raj must unite the planet and enable humanity to retake the stars. The story is at least somewhat based on that of the Byzatine general Belisarius.
The first seven novels are written by Drake and Stirling. The last one by Drake and Flint. David Drake writes very detailed outlines, while his collaborators write the actual text.
The first five novels are a set and deal with the conquest/unification of Bellevue. They are nowadays published in two volumes, known as Warlord and Conqueror:
* The Forge * The Hammer * The Anvil * The Steel * The Sword
After finishing the conquest of Bellevue, the personalities of Center and Raj are imbued in computers that are sent to other worlds with launched asteroids. Basically this scenario has infinite permutations as human worlds at various levels of development can be written about. The first of these follow-up novels is:
* The Chosen
It is a great singleton set on a world with early twentieth century technology. Finally there is the two volume story consisting of:
* The Reformer * The Tyrant
Here, we take a serious step “back in time”, as the planet Hafardine is at about Roman Empire level in it’s technology. The Tyrant is rather different in style from the others due to being penned by Flint. However, his trademark dry humor meshes well with the overall thrust of the series.
This is great military SciFi, with excellent battlescenes and great characters, not to mention a dose of dry humor. Very highly recommended.
A very enjoyable and fast read. The sci-fi Byzantine adventure continues with a wonderfully evoked siege against a not-so-barbaric foe, with the usual delightful mix of historical titbits (you don't spot the Frumentarii that much in fiction!) and sci-fi archaeology (discovery of 'ancient plastics'). The idea of war as an accelerator of development is illustrated very smoothly and makes me think this series could yet finish in orbit!
Ugh, with Whitehalls wife alluded infidelities confirmed and his obliviousness (or worst acceptance) to them really sours that whole POV for me and takes away from his mystic. She definitely serves a purpose, but you could've had the same character but made it a sister and I would've loved her.
Another very good installment in the series. Same good characters, working together. Nothing new, though, and no surprises. Victory in the end is a little contrived, and we are still in the middle of the campaign. Wish the book was longer . . . but I'll read another.