Cheats for GTA - for all GTA games (GTA 5 & GTA V)
Lifestyle
App
Cheats for GTA provides simple quick and easy access to every cheat code for every Grand Theft Auto...
The Skin
Book
“It is a shameful thing to win a war.” The reliably unorthodox Curzio Malaparte’s own service...
Cheats for GTA - for all Grand Theft Auto games
Reference and Games
App
Cheats for GTA provides quick and easy access to every cheat code for every Grand Theft Auto game. ...
LEGO Batman: DC Super Heroes
Games and Entertainment
App
***Please ensure iCloud is enabled in advance in order for purchases to be restored. To enable...
Soul Hunters - Assassin's AGE
Games
App
Welcome to a world of Holy Paladins, Deadly Dragons, Evil Wizards and over 50 other playable heroes!...
I have read Adrian Tchakovsky's Shadows of the Apt series and loved it.
I recently read his Dogs of War and enjoyed it. However I think this has somewhat tainted Ironclads for me.
Ireonclads sees us again in the near-future where the UK (read as England which annoyed me, being Scottish) has gained independence from Europe and subsequently gone bust and been bought over by the USA. The USA is likewise invading or at war with much of the rest of the world. These wars are now fought mainly in corporate interest (but then what's new *cough gulf war cough*) with armies of poorly equipped government soldiers being dent in to conflict occasionally supported by corporate playboys (generally the heir to the corporate fortunes) in their massive armoured scion suits (hence iron-clad) where they are fully protected from pretty much everything. These playboys tend to be captured by each other and ransomed back to their families, guffawing at their japes all the way.
The story sees one small group of US soldiers sent in to deepest darkest Sweden to rescue one such playboy who got himself too far ahead of the army and appears to have gone missing but without ransom (without his scion suit).
Being a short (200 pages) book worked well for me, I felt any more scenes or narrative would have felt like padding and this was its natural length.
However, for me this book felt like the notes or background story to Dogs of War and has suffered from my having read the latter. That book notes that wars used to be fought with machines and robots but moves on to cybernetically enhanced animals. This book felt like a side story or introduction to the Dogs of War world and little more.
Other aspects of the story chimed with that of Dogs of War as well and showed the author to be a little short of ideas - living beings with their brains/bodies cybernetically enhanced, swarms of insects used to disrupt communications, the USA being a little bit invadey and corrupt etc.
While this is not my usual cup of tea, I have enjoyed other sci-fi and felt this was a little slapdash. I didn't like the narrative style, finding the blasé, informal tones of the army sergeant both jarring and poorly executed. And while I don't need to be spoon-fed the plot, I found some elements badly or barely explained (what DID the Finns do?!) and the major plot twist neither surprising nor worth the wait.
Tchaikovsky can describe a battle scene well and you get a feel for the whole battle as well as the key conflicts, so the action itself is fairly gripping at times. However, the finished article left me feeling a bit meh.
All in all I am glad I read this, but had expected better things from his sci-fi given Children of Time won the Arthur C Clarke award.
Sir Walter Raleigh
Book
Sir Walter Raleigh was truly the Renaissance man of Elizabethan England: soldier and diplomat...
DisneyNOW – Shows & Live TV
Entertainment and Photo & Video
App
-WATCH FULL EPISODES: Watch your favorite Disney Channel, Disney XD and Disney Junior shows,...
The Dream of Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Philosophy
Book
Western philosophy is now two and a half millennia old, but much of it came in just two staccato...
Philosophy
Royal Revolt 2
Games
App
Royal Revolt 2 is an action-packed strategy game. Build your defensive path and raid other players...