REVIEW

Book Review: On Basilisk Station by David Weber

Written by Mel Odom
Published February 25, 2007

Honor Harrington is the heroine of several novels. On Basilisk Station is the first. In this book, Honor is a junior grade officer who ends up with a bad assignment because she made higher-grade officers look bad in a war games maneuver. She’s young, clever, ambitious, loyal, and not afraid of anything.

I was intrigued that a woman was the main character of the series. The genre is military science fiction, a hybrid whose parent genres usually fall into the domain of “boy” books. But the author, and Honor, pull off the task amazingly well. When Honor thinks on the page, I never forgot that she was a woman in a man’s world, and that made her course of action all the more daunting in some respects.

After upstaging her fellow officers in the war game, Honor is reassigned to the armpit of the known universe. At least, one of the armpits. Stuck out at Basilisk Station, where the Royal Mantacorian Navy doesn't really bother to enforce all the rules and turns a blind eye to some of the black market dealings there that are extremely profitable to corporations who have the ears of the royal courts, Honor feels doomed to a career of mediocrity.

Fate intervenes, though, and the main flagship and the captain return for new fittings. Everybody knows, however, that the ranking officer just wants to log some downtime and leave his newest officer abandoned with the impossible and hopeless task of policing the area. Honor is left behind and placed in charge with a ragtag crew that hasn't yet learned to work together.

But no one expects Honor to attempt the impossible. She seizes opportunity by the throat and begins mounting her own campaign to be the best royal naval officer she can. And her first order of business is to emphasize the Navy’s presence in the area and shut down smugglers’ routes. She meets immediate resistance on part of the smugglers as well as local business and corporate trade ships from Haven, another star system that’s bent on reaping as many profits legally and illegally as they can.

David Weber is an accomplished military science fiction author. He's written the Honor Harrington books as well as other series and novels with John Ringo. The Honor Harrington universe has even spawned a sister series that concentrates on other characters from those worlds.

The book reminded me a lot of a Horatio Hornblower novel, and the movies put out by A&E. The same kind of political and military problems get in Honor's way, as well as similar crew problems. Weber intentionally designed the series to echo that historic series. The Star Kingdom of Manticore is basically Great Britain, while the People’s Republic of Haven takes France’s place. Even the feel of the navy, the pomp and procedures, is a lot the same. But the Napoleonic War still captures the attentions of readers, and these books make the conflict enjoyable all over again.

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Mel Odom is the author of over 100 novels. Winner of the American Library Association's Alex Award for 2002 and runner-up for the Christy in 2005, he's written in several genres, including tie-in novels for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Without A Trace, and novelizations of Blade, XXX, and Tomb Raider. Thankfully, he's learned to use his ADHD for good instead of evil.
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Book Review: On Basilisk Station by David Weber
Published: February 25, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Audio Book, Books: SF
Writer: Mel Odom
Mel Odom's BC Writer page
Mel Odom's personal site
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#1 — March 4, 2007 @ 13:38PM — Katie McNeill [URL]

Wow. Look at how many there are! I just love finding something I like and then discovering that there are a ton more in the series. I'll have to try this one out, thanks for the great reaview Mel! :)

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