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Mass Market Paperback Mechwarrior: Dark Age #23: Surrender Your Dreams (A Battletech Novel) Book

ISBN: 0451461207

ISBN13: 9780451461209

Mechwarrior: Dark Age #23: Surrender Your Dreams (A Battletech Novel)

(Part of the BattleTech Universe (#86) Series and MechWarrior: Dark Age novels (#23) Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

$15.89
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Book Overview

The Fidelis fight on . . . They are the Fidelis, a brotherhood of warriors whose devotion to honour and courage on the battlefield is unmatched. Their existence known only to a former exarch, they are... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Probably one of the best in the series

I really enjoyed this book, after I realived the back and forth nature of the stories. Teasers in the beginnng pull you into the different sub plots. Pardoe is one of the few authors dealing with the Mechwarrior Series where the battle scenes were intense, and had less non Mech drama. Some of the Mechwarrior series deal too much with "BS" and government than just Mech combat. He had some of the best Battletech novels involving the Clans which reflects on his current Mechwarrior novels. I hope to see more of his work in the future.

A MechWarrior book worthy of academic review

Yes, you read the title right, and I'm reviewing MechWarrior: Dark Age #23: Surrender Your Dreams. I'll get to why this book is actually worthy of an academic review in a bit, but first more on the book itself. For those who are interested in picking up the MechWarrior books because they've played the collectible figure game or one of the video games out now -- do not start with this book. Go back at least as far as Fortress Republic or before to start, if you want this book to make any sense. For those who have been with the MechWarrior universe for a while, this is a fantastic book. It is quite different from most MechWarrior books in a variety of ways. Most striking is the use of the postmodernist literary tool of breaking up and re-arranging time, so the author can jump back and forth between the characters and their lives to better tell the story of the character themselves. Chapter titles give a good clue to this and had the author been a literary snob or simply evil, he may have left it at that. Fortunately, he also placed locations and dates (including a reference to the start of Fortress Republic) that allow the reader to keep temporal orientation with the story. Also different from most MechWarrior stories is the focus on politics and strategy more than the tactics of a single battle or set of battles. This allows for the final major difference of plunging the entire MechWarrior universe into one large moral state of grey, as opposed to the usual more black and white outlook prevalent in most of the books in the series. What makes someone a "good guy" or "bad guy" in the MechWarrior usually has been clearer, but this book has turned many prior notions about the MechWarrior universe on its ear. "Morally squishy" is about as good as one gets in this book and to good effect, although redemption is still possible. If you are at all interested in the MechWarrior universe, you'll want to read this book. Lots of plot lines aren't neatly completed by the end of the book, but there are a few shocking plotlines from the Battletech universe that predated Dark Age that have important new developments. I'd love to tell you more, but it would ruin the surprise.... All of this brings me back to the title with which I started this review. While the plot and writing style are interesting, nothing there breaks new ground. What is interesting is how the series takes plot strands from the Battletech universe (both books and games) that seemed resolved or inconsequential and brings them back to focus in the current series. Thomas Marik is one example of this -- long dead in the universe, one would have expected him to be little more than a footnote in MechWarrior history, a nod for readers that have been with the series for years. Yet, in this book, he becomes a pivotal figure in a new interstellar war. Couple this use of "pop canon," for lack of a better phrase, and note the use of different forms of media (in this case, other books, p

Surrender Your Dreams

One of the greatest battletech books since the 90's, It brings back the depth and intrigue of the origional series while pushing the series in a new direction. This has got to be the best book of the Dark Age series that I've read yet, I'd Reccomend this to any Battletech or Mechwarrior fan, and even to plain Sci-Fi Fans interested in checking out the Battletech Universe

Another fine Pardoe entry

Blaine Lee Pardoe has been a contributor to the BattleTech universe for many years, first working on sourcebooks and then on novels. SURRENDER YOUR DREAMS is his second MECHWARRIOR: DARK AGE novel, and in my opinion, an improvement on the first. Where TARGET OF OPPORTUNITY seemed to be divided into two halves, the first plot, the second combat, there was none of that here; SURRENDER was well-paced throughout, doing a good job of interspersing character moments with action. While the chapter organization was... unusual, in the end I think that it was to the book's benefit. Rather than simply being three novellas, it let the reader compare and contrast the different stories, see how each person was affected by similar events. I liked that we got a deeper look at Damien Redburn; even though he's the former Exarch of the Republic, no longer in power, I've always thought that he needed some fleshing out. Here, after his "retirement", we get that. We also get something that was missing at the end of FORTRESS REPUBLIC: hope that things might just turn out okay after all. Even though we aren't privy to it, there's definitely the feeling that there's a plan at work here. It's not just the Fortress that will be working to save the Republic, but those outside it (as we see over the course of the novel). SURRENDER YOUR DREAMS is the first book to really deal with the consequences of the declaration of Fortress Republic. Blaine really hammered home just what the declaration meant for the other nine Prefectures now without a nation. With luck, this won't be the last we'll see of the efforts to save the Republic from itself...

Brilliant and innovative (for Battletech)

I should start by noting that I really, really appreciate the Fortress Republic concept, and I've been thirsty for more of it ever since the last Loren Coleman books last year. So it may not be entirely surprising that I really took to this book, since it is all about the implementation of that plan from the outside. This book consists of three separate storylines regarding different military missions, connected by a single thread - the Fidelis, an ultra-elite fighting cadre split between the three different forces. Each of the storylines starts in media res, with the Chapters interweaved throughout the book. A framing device, explaining how all of these missions were put together by Damien Redburn, the ex-Exarch, ties them together and gives them a sense of connection that wasn't there in Wolf Hunters. The writing style is very effective for the first 2/3rds or so, with information revealed early, and the context given later. Sure, it was a bit cheesy, but it helped make the framing device that much stronger - better to see first what the Republic is willing to do to preserve itself, before seeing *why*. This isn't where I'd start, certainly; I wouldn't recommend this to newcomers to the Battletech/Mechwarrior universe. But for those of us that have been reading for decades now, this is the best book that has come out in a long time.
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