We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site is free and easy, just CLICK HERE!
Already a member and forgot your password? Click here.
Have you read any of these?Dream chaser said:if its warhammer 40k you want to read read the Gaunts ghosts series by dan abbnett because they are infantary fighting all the way their are 7 novels at the moment which tell the tale of Commisar Ibrahm Gaunt & the tanith first & only a guard company who have nothing left to live for when they are made "ghosts" when their home world of Tanith is destroyed by the forces of chaos. their are two more on the way with 1 cross over novel also due out
the seven novels are (in order so u would know whats what)
First & only
Ghost maker
Necropolis
Honour Guard
Guns of tanith
straight silver
sabbat martyr
I read them all in 2 week's because they were that good they are seriously addictive an abbnett has no fear of offing characters 1 by 1
javelin98 said:William H. Keith Jr. wrote some great grunt's-perspective sci-fi. Some of his titles include Bolo Rising, Bolo Strike, and Bolo Brigade, plus the original Battletech books from twenty years ago.
John Ringo, who is one of Keith's understudies, has a decent run in books such as A Hymn Before Battle and Gust Front, but he tends towards overly-detailed descriptions of hardware and tactics, almost to the point of a futuristic Tom Clancy, so you have to be prepared for such.
Tanya Huff has started building a rep as a military sci-fi author with her Torin Kerr series, Valor's Choice and The Better Part of Valor. The main character is a Marine sergeant who starts out in the series as the typical Iron Maiden that many authors feel military women must be, but becomes more believable as time goes on.
Ian Douglas is a terrific author, and I think he does for groundpounders what David Weber did for starship combat. If you're looking for grunt action, try his Heritage trilogy -- Semper Mars, Luna Marine, and Europa Strike -- followed by his Legacy trilogy. Both are very US-centric, but are still a good read for hard mil-sci-fi fans.
That's a start for now. I know there are more good ones out there; just give me some time to think of them.
SLot Dave said:Interesting note, Ian Douglas and William H. Keith are the same person -- Ian Douglas is one of his pen names.
Paul Bond said:Some more possibilities are:
David Sherman & Dan Cragg: Starfist series.
Marines in the future. Fairly readable. 10 books in the series so far.