Hammers slammers

English language

Published Jan. 5, 1987 by Berkley Pub Group.

ISBN:
978-0-441-31602-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
948515896

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4 stars (8 reviews)

Do you know of Hammer's Slammers? Most of Mr. Drakes readers do - it's about a mercenary regiment famous for getting the job done on a large number of different worlds. Practically any veteran can read about them and feel right at home with the characters, Mr. Drake is also a veteran officer who has more than paid his dues in combat service. Let's say you are not a veteran and know nothing of the great number of stories about the Slammers - this is your lucky day for this collection of stories informs you of how the Slammers began and how many of the key personnel you'll read about in other Slammer books got their start. Enjoy.

1 edition

Review of 'Hammers slammers' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The Things They Carried in space.

I read this book because I wanted to see the origins of Hovertanks as a sci-fi trope, nut what I got was a meditation on war.

It's technology is an analogy for what we had in Vietnam, but it's also a power fantasy... if only we'd had more powerful tanks. More deadly guns. If only the Colonel could have told civilian leaders to stuff it, to grab the knife before it was stabbed in the back and twist it the other way.

But I don't begrudge drake his flights of fancy, or the fact that the Slammers violate the Geneva Convention at least once per vignette. He's telling war stories, through a lense of scifi, sure, but telling them nonetheless. He's not asking for forgiveness here. The foes aren't mindless alien bugs, they're (mostly) humans who had the misfortune of not being the highest …

Review of 'Hammers slammers' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

There is nothing I cna say to do David Drake's series justice. It was the first military science fiction I ever read (I was around 10 I think and reading one of my brother's books; this was around the time I read First Flight by Claremont too). Drake, at least in this series, always treated his characters as nothing more, or less, than just regular guys having a job to do. Many of them liked the job and many of them hated it, but it's what they were paid to do. Going back to these stories was like curling up with a childhood stuffed animal, comforting and nostalgic.

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