

Not ordering to the United States Click here. Expected delivery to the United States in 7-12 business days. If you like: Murderbot, Worm, Max Gladstone, give this a shot. Dogs of War English By (author) Adrian Tchaikovsky US15.40 US15.95 You save US0.55 Also available in Hardback US30.16 CD-Audio US24.66 Free delivery worldwide Available. I usually don't care for sentiment but the fact that it's a dog - Tchaikovsky knows exactly what he's doing. It's a well-explored idea to sink back into and I can't claim it says anything new there - but it has a fun cast of characters and made me cry while saying it, so dammit, I've got to recommend it. But pared down, at its heart Dogs of War is about what it means to be a person and what it means to be a slave. The science fiction aspects are required for the story to work - I mean, without the crocodilian sniper known as Dragon and the distributed AI network of Bees, you hardly have the same story. And that means committing wartime atrocities. He's the leader, and the chip in his brain tells him Good Dog or Bad Dog. Rex is a cross between a dog and much else, but I pretty much pictured him as a dog in a mech with guns (this is, as it turns out, inaccurate). Humans tried robots, and the robots didn't work out so their next war machines were hybrids, flesh and blood with implants and genetic engineering. The characters are convincingly other-than-human but clearly conscious and deserving. The style of the prose is neither overwrought nor sparse but where it really shines is the dialogue. With Dogs of War, Adrian Tchaikovsky has managed the near impossible and delivered both masterfully The Eloquent Page A novel which takes war and broadens the concept to include peacetime ramifications of this new frontier technology through sociopolitical commentary which in turn gives the characters and theme a 360 feel delivered through. Then this book was recommended to me and damn does it make some deep cuts. Dogs of War (Head of Zeus, 2017), ISBN 9781786693884 Bear Head (Head of Zeus, 2021), ISBN 978-1800241541 The Final Architecture. Rampant misogyny in the year 3142, anyone?) and aliens being reskinned humans, about how I saw scifi more as a reflection of the time period when it was written than a look through a scope into a potential future.


Not two days ago I was complaining about scifi never being weird enough, about humans just being human no matter what their setting (particularly in older scifi - where the dated human views are particularly noticeable. While the conceit of cyborgs, robots, consciousness debates and the rights of non-humans has all been done to death before, Dogs of War does it so well that I don't even care. Never display translations Registered users can choose which translations are shown.No spoilers (barring the first like two pages and the blurb of the book).
