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The Myriad (Tour of the Merrimack #01), Vol. 1

AUTHOR: R. M. Meluch
ISBN: 0756402794

SHORT DESCRIPTION: The "U.S.S. Merrimack" is the finest battleship class spaceship in Earth's fleet. But nothing can prepare its captain and crew for what they are about to face: three colonized worlds in the midst of a globular cluster that the Hive has somehow...

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         Editorial Review

The Myriad (Tour of the Merrimack #01), Vol. 1
- Book Review,
by R. M. Meluch

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Most military SF emphasizes the military, but while Meluch depicts combat and warrior culture as well as any writer in the subgenre, the true joy of this outstanding effort, her first novel since 1992's The Queen's Squadron and the first of a new series, lies in its inspired use of current speculation on the origins of the universe, quantum singularities and even the old chestnut of time travel. In the 25th century, an encounter with a voracious space-faring life-form called the Hive forces declared enemies, the United States and a breakaway colony that styles itself as a reborn Roman Empire, into an uneasy alliance to destroy the common threat. When the U.S. space battleship Merrimack makes first contact with a humanoid race whose star system has apparently been bypassed by the Hive, the U.S. crew is left to ponder how a species that hasn't developed FTL technology can exist in not one but at least three different star systems. Meanwhile, how can an artifact sent by the current ruler of one system exist as an archeological anomaly on another, an artifact 20 billion years old, in a universe only 15 billion years old? Meluch shows particular skill in creating memorable characters while exhibiting a refreshing ruthlessness in subordinating them to the logical ramifications of the plot. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
After a 10-years hiatus, a distinguished military sf writer returns to print with a zany adventure that might be considered a PG-13-rated Star Trek. The U.S. space warship Merrimack roams the stars and engages in battle with the all-devouring, space-faring, semisentient, and deadly Swarm. Her captain is Farragut; his chief adviser is a genetically enhanced "patterner" from a human culture that is striving to reproduce the Roman Empire; the air wing of single-seat fighters (a staple of Meluch's fiction) is flown by marines; and one of the pilots is dispatched to seduce the humanoid ruler of an alien race. Eventually, she winds up in bed with the marine CO, and the Merrimack winds up zapped into a parallel universe, with a Chinese female scientist supplanting the Roman patterner, and the whole adventure promising a good deal for the future of the series, Tour of the Merrimack, that it inaugurates. Those who make of military sf a religious observance may find it amusingly difficult to take; the more sensible will quite enjoy. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description
A thrilling new military science fiction series begins.

The U.S. Merrimack was the finest battleship class spaceship in Earth's fleet, able to stand up against the best the Palatine Empire could throw at them, even able to survive attack by swarms of the seemingly unstoppable Hive. But nothing could have prepared the captain and crew of the Merrimack for what they were about to face: Three colonized worlds-the Myriad-in the midst of a globular cluster that the Hive somehow overlooked...


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         Book Review

The Myriad (Tour of the Merrimack #01), Vol. 1
- Book Reviews,
by R. M. Meluch

The Myriad (Tour of the Merrimack #01), Vol. 1

FROM OUR EDITORS

The Barnes & Noble Review
R. M. Meluch's first novel in more than a decade, The Myriad, begins a series that is an amalgam of subgenres: military science fiction, space opera, time paradox, and alternate history.

On an Earth where the Roman Empire never fell (but instead existed in secret societies for millennia, finally reestablishing itself on the planet Palatine) and is now embroiled in a war against the League of Earth Nations, a much more deadly foe emerges from the darkness of deep space -- the Hive. The governments of Palatine and Earth enter into an uneasy alliance to fight the alien invaders, nondescript antqagonists that exist only to consume. While the unified forces try to keep the Hive from destroying human-populated planets, one U.S. battleship, the Merrimack, sets off on a quest to find the Hive's homeworld and take the battle to its source.

During the ship's desperate search, the crew of the Merrimack discovers a strange star cluster with three worlds inhabited by sentient beings. After first contact with the amazingly humanoid populace, Captain John Farragut discovers a series of wormholes that could unlock the secrets that could defeat the Hive -- or destroy humankind forever.

Vaguely reminiscent of Robert A. Heinlein's Starship Troopers (specifically, the relentless alien antagonists and the over-the-top, gung-ho characters), Meluch's The Myriad is lighthearted, fast-paced fun. While obviously not as intense or controversial as Heinlein's Hugo Award�winning classic, this novel will prove thorougly enjoyable to fans of military science fiction authors like David Weber and David Drake. Paul Goat Allen

FROM THE PUBLISHER

A thrilling new military science fiction series begins.

The U.S. Merrimack was the finest battleship class spaceship in Earth's fleet, able to stand up against the best the Palatine Empire could throw at them, even able to survive attack by swarms of the seemingly unstoppable Hive. But nothing could have prepared the captain and crew of the Merrimack for what they were about to face: Three colonized worlds-the Myriad-in the midst of a globular cluster that the Hive somehow overlooked...

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Most military SF emphasizes the military, but while Meluch depicts combat and warrior culture as well as any writer in the subgenre, the true joy of this outstanding effort, her first novel since 1992's The Queen's Squadron and the first of a new series, lies in its inspired use of current speculation on the origins of the universe, quantum singularities and even the old chestnut of time travel. In the 25th century, an encounter with a voracious space-faring life-form called the Hive forces declared enemies, the United States and a breakaway colony that styles itself as a reborn Roman Empire, into an uneasy alliance to destroy the common threat. When the U.S. space battleship Merrimack makes first contact with a humanoid race whose star system has apparently been bypassed by the Hive, the U.S. crew is left to ponder how a species that hasn't developed FTL technology can exist in not one but at least three different star systems. Meanwhile, how can an artifact sent by the current ruler of one system exist as an archeological anomaly on another, an artifact 20 billion years old, in a universe only 15 billion years old? Meluch shows particular skill in creating memorable characters while exhibiting a refreshing ruthlessness in subordinating them to the logical ramifications of the plot. Agent, Jennifer Jackson at DMLA. (Jan. 4) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.


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