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The Complete Hammer's Slammers Volume 1 par…
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The Complete Hammer's Slammers Volume 1 (édition 2009)

par David Drake

Séries: Hammer's Slammers (Omnibus)

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293389,803 (3.85)2
The Best-Selling Series That Rocketed David Drake to Military Science Fiction Stardom. The First of Three Volumes Collecting the Complete Series. With a veteran's eye for the harsh and gritty details of war, David Drake depicts a futuristic analog of tank combat in his Hammer's Slammers fiction. The Slammers are neither cartoon heroes nor propaganda villains; rather they are competent professionals engaged in a deadly business. The inevitable conflicts between policy, necessity, and human nature make Drake's Slammers fiction instantly identifiable and utterly compelling. This is the first of a three volume set presenting for the first time the entire genre-defining Slammers series in a uniform trade paperback set, with new introductions by major SF figures and new afterwords by David Drake. Each volume will also include a Slammers story not collected in previous Slammer's books.                "Fans of Drake's edgy stories of a mercenary tank regiment in a future not all that different from our present will rejoice [at the publication of] the entire series in three volumes. Drake, a Vietnam vet who served in the Blackhorse Regiment, uses prose as cold and hard as the metal alloy of a tank to portray the men and women of Hammer's Regiment. . . .  In his depiction of combat, Drake rivals Crane and Remarque." --Publishers Weekly, reviewing the Night Shade hardcover edition… (plus d'informations)
Membre:rffischer
Titre:The Complete Hammer's Slammers Volume 1
Auteurs:David Drake
Info:Baen Books, Kindle Edition, 528 pages
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The Complete Hammers's Slammers: Volume I par David Drake

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» Voir aussi les 2 mentions

3 sur 3
Hammers Slammers is the military sci-fi series that I cut my teeth on. There's some definite nostalgia value here for me, but that doesn't take away from a series of awesome, straight-up no frills hard sci-fi.

Tank mercenaries doing whatever it takes to complete their contracts. Excellent. ( )
1 voter HarperKingsley | Nov 13, 2013 |
Dad got me this and the second volume for my birthday last year, and they were awesome. The books are about a future tank squadron which takes on mercenary jobs, none of which ever seem to be clean or simple. Along the way you end up learning that they're all just misfits who haven't managed to find any other job which is a better fit for them. Worse than that, I'm left with the impression that in the back of their minds they all realize that they're running on borrowed time. David Drake has a unique position to comment on what its like to fight in a war, given he is a Vietnam veteran. These stories are fantastic science fiction, and often leave you with a realization that war often isn't simple, or fair. I first encountered David's writing when I was a kid reading a remaindered anthology called "Battlefields Beyond Tomorrow", which was a collection of short war science fiction stories. Luckily for me 15 or so years after I first encountered them I still think they are great stories. These books are highly recommended.

http://www.stillhq.com/book/David_Drake/The_Complete_Hammers_Slammers_Volume_1.h... ( )
1 voter mikal | Nov 15, 2008 |
Volume 1 of 3, this is a collection of David Drake's "Hammer's Slammers" stories. There are a few new stories in the series, and some artwork and other new details. Otherwise it's a collection of existing stories. A plausible exploration of mercenary ground combat in a 28th century. Instead of focusing on superhuman characters, the soldiers in these stories are much like people now, human, and trying to do the best job they can. ( )
1 voter mgreenla | May 13, 2008 |
3 sur 3
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“The ambush, Captain,” Tromp pressed stolidly. With visible effort, Stilchey regained the thread of his narrative. “Joachim drove. Hammer and I were in the back along with a noncom from Curwin – Worzer, his name was. He and Joachim threw dice for who had to drive. The road was supposed to be clear but Hammer made me put on body armor. I thought it was cop, you know – make the staffer get hot and dusty. “Via,” he swore again, but softly this time. “I was at the left-side powergun but I wasn’t paying much attention; nothing really to pay attention to. Hammer was on the radio a lot, but my helmet only had intercom so I didn’t know what he was saying. The road was stabilized earth, just a gray line through hectares of those funny blue plants you see all over here, the ones with the fat leaves.” “Bluebrights,” the older man said dryly. “ Melpomone’s only export; as you would know from the briefing cubes you were issued in transit, I should think.” “Would the Lord I’d never heard of this damned place!” Stilchey blazed back. His family controlled Karob Trading; no civil servant – not even Tromp, the Gray Eminence behind the Congress of the Republic – could cow him. But he was a soldier, too, and after a moment he continued: ‘Bluebrights in rows, waist high and ugly, and beyond that nothing but the soil blowing away as we passed.” “We were half an hour out from the firebase, maybe half the way to here. The ground was dimpled with frost heaves. A little copse was in sight ahead of us, trees ten, fifteen meters high. Hammer had the forward gun, and on the intercom he said, ”Want to double the bet, Blacky?” Then they armed their guns – I didn’t know why – and Worzer said, “I still think they’ll be in the draw two kays south, but I won’t take any more of your money.’ They were laughing and I thought they were going to just … clear the guns, you know?” The captain closed his eyes. He remembered how they had stared at him, two bulging circles and the hollow of his screaming mouth below them, reflected on the polished floorplate of the combat car. “The command car blew up just as we entered the trees. There was a flash like the sun and it ate the back half of the car, armor and all. The front flipped over and over into the trees, and the air stank with metal. Joachim laid us sideways to follow the part the mine had left, cutting in right behind when it hit a tree and stopped. The driver raised his head out of the hatch and maybe he could have got clear himself … but Hammer jumped off our deck to his and jerked him out, yanked him up in his armor as small as he is. Then they were back in our car. They were firing, everybody was firing, and we turned right, into the trees, into the guns.” “There were Mel troops in the grove, then?” Tromp asked. “Must have been,” Stilchey replied. He looked straight at the older man and said, very simply, “I was behind the bulkhead. Maybe if I’d known what to expect…The other driver was at my gun, they didn’t need me.” Stilchey swallowed once, continued: “Some shots hit on my side. They didn’t come through, but they made the whole car ring. The empties kept spattering me and the car was bounding, jumping downed trees. Everything seemed to be on fire. We cleared the grove into another field of bluebright. Shells from the firebase were already landing in the trees; the place was targeted. And Worzer pulled off his helmet and he spat and said, ‘Cold meat, Colonel, you couldn’t a called it better.’ Via!”
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The Best-Selling Series That Rocketed David Drake to Military Science Fiction Stardom. The First of Three Volumes Collecting the Complete Series. With a veteran's eye for the harsh and gritty details of war, David Drake depicts a futuristic analog of tank combat in his Hammer's Slammers fiction. The Slammers are neither cartoon heroes nor propaganda villains; rather they are competent professionals engaged in a deadly business. The inevitable conflicts between policy, necessity, and human nature make Drake's Slammers fiction instantly identifiable and utterly compelling. This is the first of a three volume set presenting for the first time the entire genre-defining Slammers series in a uniform trade paperback set, with new introductions by major SF figures and new afterwords by David Drake. Each volume will also include a Slammers story not collected in previous Slammer's books.                "Fans of Drake's edgy stories of a mercenary tank regiment in a future not all that different from our present will rejoice [at the publication of] the entire series in three volumes. Drake, a Vietnam vet who served in the Blackhorse Regiment, uses prose as cold and hard as the metal alloy of a tank to portray the men and women of Hammer's Regiment. . . .  In his depiction of combat, Drake rivals Crane and Remarque." --Publishers Weekly, reviewing the Night Shade hardcover edition

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