Immagine dell'autore.

Jonathan P. Brazee

Autore di Recruit

74+ opere 375 membri 6 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Jonathan Brazee

Serie

Opere di Jonathan P. Brazee

Recruit (2014) 40 copie
Sentenced to War (2021) 39 copie
Fire Ant (2018) 34 copie
Legacy Marines (2016) 15 copie
Sergeant (2014) 13 copie
Children of Angels (2021) 12 copie
Gladiator (2015) 12 copie
Lieutenant (2014) 11 copie
Song of Redemption (2021) 9 copie
Major (2015) 9 copie
Lieutenant Colonel (2015) 8 copie
Captain (2015) 8 copie
Colonel (2015) 7 copie
Semper Lycanus (2014) 7 copie
Integration (2018) 7 copie
Wererat (2012) 7 copie
Sniper (2016) 7 copie
Commandant (2015) 6 copie
The Proud (2013) 6 copie
The Few (2013) 6 copie
Corpsman (2016) 5 copie
Alliance (2017) 5 copie
The Price of Honor (2017) 4 copie
Patria Lycanus (2015) 3 copie
Unification (2018) 3 copie
Division of Power (2018) 3 copie
Blood United (2017) 3 copie
Crystals (2018) 3 copie
To the Shores of Tripoli (2013) 2 copie
The Marines (2013) 2 copie
The Seeds of War Trilogy (2018) 2 copie
Rebel (2015) 2 copie
Pax Lycanus (2016) 2 copie
Call to Arms: Capernica (2019) 1 copia
Wasp Squadron 1 copia

Opere correlate

Nebula Awards Showcase 2019 (2019) — Collaboratore — 27 copie
Nebula Awards Showcase 54 (2020) — Collaboratore — 7 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

This military SF novella is first in a series, and it has the feel of an introduction. I liked learning about the world Beth inhabits. The social setup is an interesting starting point, although a bit short on concrete detail, but I’m happy enough to run with it. Beth comes across as well-intentioned but naive, but other than that her character didn’t really stand out for me.

The plot is pretty straightforward. After the first mission, Beth is whisked off for training, and there’s very much a flavour of “outsider kid arrives at a new school and has to establish her place by proving herself to her detractors.”

Entertaining light read.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
MHThaung | 3 altre recensioni | Jul 27, 2022 |
4 stars, Space Opera series

LEGACY MARINES (THE UNITED FEDERATION MARINE CORPS' LYSANDER TWINS, #1)
by Jonathan P. Brazee

This is an interesting space opera novel kick-off. I was pleasantly surprised to find out that it's written as a Christian novel. In some spots, the author uses vulgar words, in others he uses made-up names for the vulgar ones (I like when authors do that), and he mentions God, a lot.

The Lysander twins, Esther, who is very competitive, and Noah, who just likes to help his friends join the Marines. The Marines serve on space ships and other planets. There's some adventure, you find out all about the Lysander family history, setting up the next few novels in the series, I'm sure.

Overall, I'd recommend this book.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
HuberK | Oct 4, 2021 |
Underwhelmed

This read as a YA novel with bad language. The main character lacked a defining voice and her depth was shallow. The world-building had the appearance of depth, but little more than the facade was truly available, and that had inconsistencies. Character tropes were strewn about with abandon-the surly Master Chief, the vivacious best friend, the big mean man. Nothing happened that did not directly move or inform the central plot.

The really bad part was the physics. The ship can detect ‘weapons fire’ but doesn’t know what it is? Then how is it being tracked? It should have described what the sensors were picking up, at the very least. The helmets require full 3D scans of a pilot’s skull to manufacture, and it is apparently airtight, but you can pop it right off and suffer no ill-effects in vacuum. Really, the whole sequence where she retrieves her ‘nemesis’ was poorly contrived.

It felt forced. The narrative did not have an organic feel. It didn’t really feel much of anything.

I will not be continuing with this series.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
wildwily | 3 altre recensioni | May 28, 2020 |
Underwhelmed

This read as a YA novel with bad language. The main character lacked a defining voice and her depth was shallow. The world-building had the appearance of depth, but little more than the facade was truly available, and that had inconsistencies. Character tropes were strewn about with abandon-the surly Master Chief, the vivacious best friend, the big mean man. Nothing happened that did not directly move or inform the central plot.

The really bad part was the physics. The ship can detect ‘weapons fire’ but doesn’t know what it is? Then how is it being tracked? It should have described what the sensors were picking up, at the very least. The helmets require full 3D scans of a pilot’s skull to manufacture, and it is apparently airtight, but you can pop it right off and suffer no ill-effects in vacuum. Really, the whole sequence where she retrieves her ‘nemesis’ was poorly contrived.

It felt forced. The narrative did not have an organic feel. It didn’t really feel much of anything.

I will not be continuing with this series.
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
wildwily | 3 altre recensioni | May 28, 2020 |

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Statistiche

Opere
74
Opere correlate
2
Utenti
375
Popolarità
#64,333
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
6
ISBN
57
Lingue
1

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