Legion of the Damned | |||||||
William C. Dietz | |||||||
Titan Books, 368 pages | |||||||
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A review by Sandra Scholes
I remember being sent Andromeda's Fall even before I knew about William C. Dietz's novels and the extent of them. I enjoyed
reading about a woman protagonist whose family had been given the death blow by another woman, Princess Ophelia, who felt she should
be the one to rule instead. Her life as she knew it had taken a drastic turn and while other lesser women would have fled and maybe
cowered behind a wall to escape the horrors around them, Andromeda decides to fight, and fight she does. I like reading science
fiction for the break from real life events, yet I can imagine someone like Andromeda, a woman hurt, and left to pick up the pieces
of her life while others go on with theirs unaware a cruel princess is controlling the lives of countless minions.
As the first in the Legion of the Damned series, we get to find out firsthand what happens in the far future of warfare
to ordinary people and how they fit into the Empire. The overall galactic ruler, the emperor is a peculiar, if indulgent type who
has his own needs to satisfy while he views that the ordinary people can go to hell. Such an emperor isn't worthy of much praise
at all, but he does have the Legion to command at his will. The Legion are a fierce fighting force who know no fear. They are part
man, part cyborg and all fighting machine in the face of adversity. In this world, the plot surrounds the Legion and their dealings
with their enemies, the Hudatha. Dietz's harsh vision of a cruel future comes backed up with several looks at the Legion's strategy
against their enemy who appear to be technologically superior to them in many ways. And just in case the science fiction element
of battle might have been lost, there are lots of battles here, bloody and intense ones that don't always play out as one would
expect. So the reader understands exactly what is going on in the midst of these battles, Dietz explains his tactics and
strategy most of the time to good effect even though you realise some of the characters are not destined to get much of a word count.
Even though this is a novel set far in the future, sex and women's roles haven't changed much there are still women who will
allow themselves to be exploited by men who most women wouldn't entertain outside of a Mills & Boon paperback. Unfortunately,
the sex in this is run-of-the-mill and thankfully there isn't too much of it. Dietz sticks to what he is good at, the tactics,
fight scenes and endless battles. The sex doesn't work very well in such a novel, it only serves to be something he included as
perhaps it being a man's type of novel he expected to have a few sex scenes in it. Maybe it was an afterthought, hopefully it
was. He does however combine gritty and realistic life concepts with the guns and ammo that goes with them. His concepts for
the guns are as one would expect, as are the two different types of cyborgs we get to see up close and personal, the bipedal
and the Quads who move the story on to be one of the many heights to the novel. He doesn't go into too much detail about the
technology, just enough so that the reader is aware of what it entails and how the cyborgs can use it in their battles.
Dietz lets the reader enjoy and make their mind up about the characters and their development, and doesn't waste time
explaining too much about the intricacies of war the way some other writers do. He got together a large enough cast of
characters you didn't get bored with, you enjoyed reading about their ups and downs, and with some of them finding out how
far they would go to protect their own self interests. It doesn't matter whether a character is good or bad they have the
same chance of dying as the next warrior. I assumed that might be the reason for the huge cast -- anyone could die at any
moment during a specific battle, so anything goes with this novel.
Sandra usually at this point finds the Fall weather a pain in the proverbial ass, yet with it still being rather summery, she doesn't mind the heat, not when she's got so much lovely review material she can read in the garden - her work has been published in Hellnotes, The British Fantasy Society, Albedo One, Love Romance Passion and Diverse Japan. |
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