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The Light Brigade

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
NAMED BY PUBLISHERS WEEKLY AS A BEST BOOK OF 2019

From the Hugo Award­­–winning author of The Stars Are Legion comes a brand-new science fiction thriller about a futuristic war during which soldiers are broken down into light in order to get them to the front lines on Mars.
They said the war would turn us into light.
I wanted to be counted among the heroes who gave us this better world.

The Light Brigade: it's what soldiers fighting the war against Mars call the ones who come back...different. Grunts in the corporate corps get busted down into light to travel to and from interplanetary battlefronts. Everyone is changed by what the corps must do in order to break them down into light. Those who survive learn to stick to the mission brief—no matter what actually happens during combat.

Dietz, a fresh recruit in the infantry, begins to experience combat drops that don't sync up with the platoon's. And Dietz's bad drops tell a story of the war that's not at all what the corporate brass want the soldiers to think is going on.

Is Dietz really experiencing the war differently, or is it combat madness? Trying to untangle memory from mission brief and survive with sanity intact, Dietz is ready to become a hero—or maybe a villain; in war it's hard to tell the difference.

A worthy successor to classic stories like Downbelow Station, Starship Troopers, and The Forever War, The Light Brigade is award-winning author Kameron Hurley's gritty time-bending take on the future of war.
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    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2019

      Dietz has joined the infantry to take revenge for the family and others lost at São Paulo. She's fighting for Tene-Silvia, one of the Big Six corporations battling against Mars. To fight so far away, soldiers are broken down into light to travel, corporealize at the battlefronts, and collected back afterward. Everyone changes in war, but Dietz is experiencing bad combat drops that show missions and fights different from what was briefed. As Dietz struggles to stay committed to the effort and fellow platoon members, her memories tell a story very much removed from the one she started with. VERDICT Hurley's (The Stars Are Legion) take on war and interplanetary adventure is mixed with a vigorous helping of time travel, which will have readers trying to catch up with the truth as much as the lead character. An absorbing and gritty story from this accomplished author.--Kristi Chadwick, Massachusetts Lib. Syst., Northampton

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 15, 2019
      Like Billy Pilgrim from Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, Hurley's protagonist, Dietz, becomes "unstuck in time," bouncing from battle to battle in this brutal futuristic exploration into the meaninglessness of war and the legacies of corporate greed.This book is full of such deliberate cultural references, beginning with the title's allusion to the famously doomed charge during the Crimean War. Here, it's also a nickname for the soldiers of the Corporate Corps who have a bad reaction to their deployments via teleportation, ending up not quite where--or when--they expected to go. Despite being neglected or abused by the corporations that run the devastated Earth, Dietz joined the corps (and unwittingly, the Light Brigade) in the war against Mars after that planet's independent settlers apparently made millions of people disappear from São Paolo, all of Dietz's family among them. When called to active duty, Dietz (gender unspecified for most of the book, but you'll figure it out fairly soon) experiences missions out of sequence with linear time, losing and regaining comrades, ordered to perform morally dubious actions which don't seem to lead to victory, and gradually collecting information that strongly suggests that the enemy is not whom Dietz was told it was. Does the war have an end? Is the future predetermined? Is Dietz trapped in a fixed but fractured loop of existence, or is there a means of escape? As always, Hurley (Apocalypse Nyx, 2018, etc.) is plausibly unflinching about the damage inflicted by the power hungry on those they delegate to carry out their schemes, but thankfully, she doesn't leave her readers in utter despair, either.A fascinating and brilliantly confusing journey that ultimately ends, as is appropriate, in illumination. Rereads will be both necessary and desirable.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from January 1, 2019
      Hurley's latest (after Apocalypse Nyx, 2018) presents a future in which the government consists of six massive corporations and society is divided into corporate citizens and dispossessed, status-less "ghouls." The Six and their private armies are waging a war against the colonists of Mars after the Martians reportedly made the entire population of S�o Paulo disappear in "the Blink." To transport their soldiers in and out of combat, the Six use an experimental technology to break down their bodies into light and rematerialize them at their destination. Dietz, a soldier and former ghoul whose family and ex-girlfriend disappeared in the Blink, is eager to become part of the war effort. On her first drop, however, she starts experiencing events and history seemingly out of order, going on missions she's never heard of with soldiers she's never even met. Mixing a gritty and muscular writing style with an intricate and time-hopping plot with echoes of Philip K. Dick's Now Wait for Last Year, The Light Brigade is an enthralling portrait of a devastated near future. Highly recommended for not only sf fans but anyone interested in a thrilling and troubling vision of the future.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2019

      Dietz has joined the infantry to take revenge for the family and others lost at S�o Paulo. She's fighting for Tene-Silvia, one of the Big Six corporations battling against Mars. To fight so far away, soldiers are broken down into light to travel, corporealize at the battlefronts, and collected back afterward. Everyone changes in war, but Dietz is experiencing bad combat drops that show missions and fights different from what was briefed. As Dietz struggles to stay committed to the effort and fellow platoon members, her memories tell a story very much removed from the one she started with. VERDICT Hurley's (The Stars Are Legion) take on war and interplanetary adventure is mixed with a vigorous helping of time travel, which will have readers trying to catch up with the truth as much as the lead character. An absorbing and gritty story from this accomplished author.--Kristi Chadwick, Massachusetts Lib. Syst., Northampton

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 15, 2019
      Like Billy Pilgrim from Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, Hurley's protagonist, Dietz, becomes "unstuck in time," bouncing from battle to battle in this brutal futuristic exploration into the meaninglessness of war and the legacies of corporate greed.This book is full of such deliberate cultural references, beginning with the title's allusion to the famously doomed charge during the Crimean War. Here, it's also a nickname for the soldiers of the Corporate Corps who have a bad reaction to their deployments via teleportation, ending up not quite where--or when--they expected to go. Despite being neglected or abused by the corporations that run the devastated Earth, Dietz joined the corps (and unwittingly, the Light Brigade) in the war against Mars after that planet's independent settlers apparently made millions of people disappear from S�o Paolo, all of Dietz's family among them. When called to active duty, Dietz (gender unspecified for most of the book, but you'll figure it out fairly soon) experiences missions out of sequence with linear time, losing and regaining comrades, ordered to perform morally dubious actions which don't seem to lead to victory, and gradually collecting information that strongly suggests that the enemy is not whom Dietz was told it was. Does the war have an end? Is the future predetermined? Is Dietz trapped in a fixed but fractured loop of existence, or is there a means of escape? As always, Hurley (Apocalypse Nyx, 2018, etc.) is plausibly unflinching about the damage inflicted by the power hungry on those they delegate to carry out their schemes, but thankfully, she doesn't leave her readers in utter despair, either.A fascinating and brilliantly confusing journey that ultimately ends, as is appropriate, in illumination. Rereads will be both necessary and desirable.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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