Series: Book 6 in the Deathstalker series
Rating: ****
Tags: EN-SciFi, Lang:en
Summary
A century has passed since Owen Deathstalker sacrificed
himself for humanity, and a Golden Age of peace began between
the many species of the galaxy.
But Owen's descendant, Lewis Deathstalker, has his work
cut out for him as the king's new Champion and protector-for
the Golden Age of peace is about to be brought into
ruin... Bestseller Green, author of the Deathstalker series
(Deathstalker War, etc.), which concluded with Owen
Deathstalker and his ragtag comrades defeating the evil
Empress Lionstone, presents a swashbuckling sequel, in which
Owen's descendant Lewis is dragged unwillingly into emulating
his ancestor's desperate heroism. Lewis just wants to be a
good Paragon (a kind of high-tech supercop/knight) and
faithfully serve his best friend, King Douglas.
Unfortunately, Lewis and the king's intended bride fall
hopelessly in love. Even more unfortunately, as if there
weren't enough monstrously subversive groups plotting against
the throne from outside the court, Lewis's jealous rival,
Finn, who has a perfect Paragon's surface but a brilliant
sociopath's soul, succeeds in discrediting Lewis and throwing
the government into disarray. And then the planet-scouring
Terror erupts from another dimension. As is in a lot of space
opera, the plot doesn't withstand close scrutiny, but this
hardly matters as the narrative rushes from one dramatic set
piece to the next. If the characterization seems just a shade
above comic-book complexity, Green uses echoes of the somber
King Arthur legend to lend extra weight. At the end, when
Lewis sets off on his heroic quest to locate the original
Deathstalker, accompanied by an outrageously diverse band of
cohorts, the prospect of another long series of long novels
actually sounds like fun.
This stout, exuberant piece of intelligent space opera
continues the saga of those elite warriors and masters of
interstellar intrigue and violence, the Deathstalkers, one of
whom, Douglas Campbell, is about to take the throne of the
empire, which is at the height of its power, prosperity, and
benignity. Campbell has even been assigned a bride, the
gorgeous opera singer Jesamine Flowers. But terrorism looms
even before the royal wedding and, after it, crashes the
party on a truly ghastly scale, triggering some 400 pages of
non-stop, slightly tongue-in-cheek action. There are plots,
counterplots, subplots, and characters getting plotzed on
"Death by Chocolate" ice cream as well as much undercover
action, the covers for which are quite varied. In the end,
Lewis Deathstalker leads a motley starship crew off to . . .
the sequel, of which this book bodes well. Great fun if you
don't take it too seriously.
Roland Green
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Booklist
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reserved