Immagine dell'autore.

Kevin Killiany

Autore di To Ride the Chimera

36+ opere 200 membri 1 recensione 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Kevin Killiany

Serie

Opere di Kevin Killiany

To Ride the Chimera (2008) 37 copie
Wolf Hunters (2006) 36 copie
S.C.E.: Orphans (2004) 34 copie
S.C.E.: Honor (2005) 31 copie
Godt Bytte (2008) 2 copie
Crucible at Campoleone (2010) 2 copie
Convergence at Khon Kaen (2007) 2 copie
Tides of Change (2006) 2 copie
Endgame at Engadine (2007) 2 copie
Djinn of Despair (2007) 2 copie
The Dragons of Despair (2006) 2 copie
Pirates of Penance (2004) 2 copie
Bad Water (2010) 2 copie
Encounter at El Giza (2005) 2 copie
Determination at Wallis (2005) 2 copie
Crossroads at Outreach (2005) 2 copie
Decision at Acamar (2005) 2 copie
Pitcairn Star (2004) 2 copie
Rock in a Hard Place (2005) 2 copie
What I Remember Most (2004) 2 copie
McKenna Station (2004) 2 copie
Commitment (2007) 2 copie
A Different Hope (2007) 2 copie
Sleight of Hand (2005) 2 copie
A Line in the Dust (2005) 2 copie
Blitzernte (2006) 2 copie
The Last Full Measure (2006) 2 copie
Daemon Hunter 1 copia

Opere correlate

Strange New Worlds IV (2001) — Collaboratore — 110 copie
Strange New Worlds VII (2004) — Collaboratore — 108 copie
Corps of Engineers: Grand Designs (2007) — Collaboratore — 104 copie
Strange New Worlds V (2002) — Collaboratore — 103 copie
Corps of Engineers: Out of the Cocoon (2010) — Collaboratore — 80 copie
Short Trips: Destination Prague (2007) — Collaboratore — 50 copie
Legacy: A Battletech Anthology (2017) — Collaboratore — 9 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

Wolf Hunters is Kevin Killiany's first novel, but you wouldn't know it from reading it. (Admittedly, he's not new to fiction writing, or even to the BattleTech universe; he's been writing short fiction set in this universe for the past two years, released through BattleCorps.) In the novel, he does an excellent job of recapturing the characters developed by others (including Loren L. Coleman and Martin Delrio), even as he rebuilds them to fit the changing miniatures game.

Anastasia Kerensky has been perhaps the most maddeningly inconsistent character in the universe, with only Katie S-D giving her a run for her money. But in Wolf Hunters, Kevin Killiany embraced that inconsistency; his Anastasia runs the gamut, from hardline Clanner to indulgent Spheroid. And yet, she really doesn't; she puts on whatever face will get her what she needs: the survival of her Wolves.

The book details the evolution of the Steel Wolves of prior novels into the Wolf Hunters of the future. As is to be expected whenever a Clan unit undergoes change, there are objectors, which results in fights. Most of these are well-depicted; the very last one being the exception, in that it feels like significant parts of it were skipped over. The reader's still able to follow the plot; it just felt like the battle happened almost entirely offscreen, for whatever reason.

But the multitude of battles, ranging from infantry to 'Mechs to aerospace, aren't the point of the book. That would be Anastasia's journey—nay, the Steel Wolves' journey—as they transform themselves into the Wolf Hunters who will be appearing in future novels. And (leaving the process obscured) it's an enjoyable, believable ride. Characters old and new are presented sympathetically, leaving the reader wanting to root for all sides—and managing to satisfy the reader no matter which they pick, I think.

Kevin Killiany's book continues the trend of good novels the series has managed to keep for the past several years. Wolf Hunters left me looking forward both to the return of the Wolf Hunters, and to Killiany's return to the line.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
ATimson | Feb 11, 2008 |

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Statistiche

Opere
36
Opere correlate
8
Utenti
200
Popolarità
#110,008
Voto
½ 3.3
Recensioni
1
ISBN
10
Preferito da
1

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