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This is a better book than my three stars. The stories are generally very well written and the authors include some of my favorites, like Nancy Kress and Carrie Vaughn (both of whose stories I liked a lot). I was surprised by the number of female protagonists and feminist/egalitarian viewpoints. But military SF is not really my genre, and I had to force myself to read some of the stories, however well done.
High-quality collection of mostly nearish-future sf, including some infowars as well as post-ecocollapse resource wars. Includes Carrie Vaughn, Nancy Kress (very Kress-ian tale of a young, uneducated woman who signs up to get out of her town and ends up fighting people like the people she grew up with), Elizabeth Bear, Aliette de Bodard, Garth Nix (I liked it—a sentient armory gets woken up mid-battle); Genevieve Valentine (colonialism on a new planet), and Peter Watts (my favorite of the bunch:...
No connection to either Marvel story of very nearly the same name, but the latest anthology in Jonathan Strahan's Infinity project*, this time with a theme of future war. An interesting one, because of course military SF is already its own thing, and one which with obvious exceptions (not least John Scalzi) largely happens in a Baen/Puppies ghetto off on the far side of the genre from the diverse, Tor-friendly roster of writers here. And I think the reluctance to write anything which could even
Once again a superb, thought provoking collectionWow! Stunning collection of shorter SF stories exploring future wars , soldiers and wars impacts. The target time frames range from tomorrow to hundreds of years away and the writing is all excellent and several outstanding. Two of the standouts are by E. J. Swift and Peter Watts and, I repeat, to me there are no weak stories.Jonathan Strahan has, again, curated, a superb collection of stories peering into the future. Be warned, they are not nice
Infinity Wars, Jonathan Strahan Ed.- Part of Strahan's Infinity book project, he delivers glimpses of possible futures and speculation in the "If This Goes On" vein. As with most anthologies, no everything is going to please you, but there are some gems here. I was especially taken by Aliette de Bodard's "In Everlasting Wisdom" which displays a deeply subjugated society at war and the humble practitioners of who, along with their alien implants, whisper gentle lies to keep the population in chec...
"Infinity Wars" eBook was published in 2017. This collection of short stories are from several different authors. What they have in common is War. I have to say I was not a fan of this short story collection. I read about half of the stories in the book, then quit. I like military science fiction, but these stories did not grab me. I received an ARC of this novel through https://www.netgalley.com in return for a fair and honest review. I give this short story collection a 2.8 (rounded up to a 3)...
"Infinity Wars" is the sixth installment of an ongoing anthology series by Jonathan Strahan. Unfamiliar with the previous ones I found this addition very unsteady in terms of quality.One of the general problems is that most of the authors use their genre's traits in a very superficial and obvious way to portray social or political commentary which very often leads to over-exposition and makes the stories feel cheap and obvious. There is rarely any sublety here instead we all too often get our no...
Easily one of the best anthologies I've read in years. Just fantastic story after story. I admit I was expecting more "space kablooey" works, but the theme of the collection is not focused on hard core action, though more than a few stories have that in spades.They are rather about the consequences, character changes and decisions made in such times.While they were all good stories, a few were worthy of individual callouts:Dear Sarah, Nancy KressPerfect Gun, Elizabeth BearCommand and Control, Da...
The inherent problem with a serious anthology of military science fiction is that a lot of the fun of that genre is in the mindless jingoism of humans beating up implacable aliens or what's essentially Hornblower-in-space fan-fiction. If you don't want to indulge in those more entertaining elements of military SF, what's left tends to be all fairly grim.Notable exceptions for me in the "hell of war" atmosphere were what I felt to be some of the best pieces in this collection. These include:"Face...
I loved Infinity’s End and I’m loving Infinity Wars.Military science fiction often gets a bad rep. However, this anthology shows that, just like most labels, it is woefully inadequate. There are such diverse story themes in this anthology: economic inequalities, censorship, AI , and much, much more.Of course, not every story is a hit, but even those that I found a tad drawn out, were interesting and had good characters. I think my favourite story so far (I’m about half way through) is Dear Sarah...
There were a lot of duds in this collection but a few good stories were mixed in. My favourite was "Conversations with an Armory" by Garth Nix.
Strahan's aways good. First, this is SF about military themes, not the "military SF" that's all powered battle suits, ten-mile-long dreadnaughts full of Space Marines, led by hard-as-nails leaders called "Gunny," with aliens mowed down like dandelions every few pages. This is about ordinary people (well, they started out ordinary) whose job happens to be war, and we're seeing a day in the life more than a mighty war-pivotal battle.There are quite a few "hmm, never thought about that aspect" them...
very lame and generic stories.not really military scifi, either.
Evening of the Span of Their Days, Carrie Vaughn ***The Last Broadcasts, An Owomoyela *Faceless Soldiers, Patchwork Ship, Caroline M Yoachim ***Dear Sarah, Nancy Kress ***The Moon is Not a Battlefield, Indrapramit Das **Perfect Gun, Elizabeth Bear *Oracle, Dominica Phettaplace *In Everlasting Wisdom, Aliette deBodard **Command and Control, David D. Levine **Conversations with an Armory, Garth Nix ***Overburden, Genevieve Valentine *Heavies, Rich Larson *Weather Girl, E.J. Swift *Mines, Eleanor A...
This is the first compilation from the series that i have read, and it has some very good stories. I love scifi but my experience with military scifi is very limited. Anyway, I enjoyed this selection; there are some old acquaintances here such as Aliette de Bodard, Garth Nix and Elizabeth Bear, and some authors that are new to me but i will definitely put on my TBR list such as Caroline Yoachim and Indrapramit Das.The majority of the authors are female and that´s maybe why most stories deal with...
ARC received from Netgalley for an honest review. Full review coming soon.Average rating 4.1*Very cohesive, thoughtful, diverse collection. Compulsively readable, disturbingly relevant stories that I and would highly rec this to sci fi (especially military scifi) fans.Individual Story Ratings w/ my initial thoughts:Evening of the Span of Their Days, Carrie Vaughn *4 (good little story)The Last Broadcasts, An Owomoyela *3.75 (interesting neuro atypical character)Faceless Soldiers, Patchwork Ship,...
*copy from Netgalley in exchange for a review*Infinity Wars is the sixth collection of short stories in Jonathan Strahan’s ‘Infinity’ series. I’ve read several of the others, and found they contained some good stories, so I was quite hopeful going into this one. There was a decent mix of authors who I was aware of and those I’d never read before, which always helps.Infinity Wars is about the future of war. The scope ranges from alien invasions at interstellar distances, down to the human cost of...
So far only read:-- Heavies by Rich Larson 2.5*I should of vetted better. I didn't realize the story was military science fiction. I just downloaded it based on author name recognition. Done now. Interesting but can't claim to have liked it much. Heavies refer to Earthlings that are on the planet with other "humanoids". It's gravitational pull, or however that works, makes us extra heavy there. Our MC is a military man with augments to do the job well. He and a local, or "colonist" are enjoying
The sixth entry in Jonathan Strahan's Infinity Project, INFINITY WARS, explores what war would be like in the future. That, however is such an oversimplification as to be misleading. There's military science fiction, and then there's the type of military science fiction as depicted by the terrific 15 stories written by some of the best in the science fiction field that are included in this volume. The stories here are largely character driven, and focus on the impact that war has on its particip...
An interesting look at the theme of war in SF. I enjoyed the scope of the antho, although war stories aren't really my thing in general. Standout stories for me were: Nancy Kress - Dear Sarah, Garth Nix - Conversations with an Armoury, and EJ Swift - Weather Girl. Two voice actors for the audio version meant that there was usually a switch in voices between each story, which helped them be separated.