Just finished The Forever War by Joe Haldeman.
This is a great counterweight to Heinlein's Starship Troopers, as it's about a war with aliens and involves many Heinleinian elements, such as powered armor suits and an elite infantry force.
But Haldeman wrote this book just after returning from service in Vietnam, where he was wounded in action. His take on war is definitely colored by his experience.
The story is about a man who is drafted in the 1990s (future for 1974) to fight aliens that nobody has ever seen personally. All that is known is that a UN spaceship exploring another star system was destroyed by them. Due to relativistic effects, the man serves less than ten years in service, but the Earth ages centuries. Every time he meets somebody from "home" he realizes how much he no longer fits into society. The service is brutal, and the chances of surviving are less than 30%. The army owns you, and there is no recognizable home to go back to when you get out. Very post-Vietnam indeed.
It's a great story, a real page-turner, and I burned through it in a few days. I read the last quarter of it this afternoon. Highly recommend.
---------- Post added at 09:06 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:45 PM ----------
BTW, check out my blog for my running list of must-have SF books.
This is a great counterweight to Heinlein's Starship Troopers, as it's about a war with aliens and involves many Heinleinian elements, such as powered armor suits and an elite infantry force.
But Haldeman wrote this book just after returning from service in Vietnam, where he was wounded in action. His take on war is definitely colored by his experience.
The story is about a man who is drafted in the 1990s (future for 1974) to fight aliens that nobody has ever seen personally. All that is known is that a UN spaceship exploring another star system was destroyed by them. Due to relativistic effects, the man serves less than ten years in service, but the Earth ages centuries. Every time he meets somebody from "home" he realizes how much he no longer fits into society. The service is brutal, and the chances of surviving are less than 30%. The army owns you, and there is no recognizable home to go back to when you get out. Very post-Vietnam indeed.
It's a great story, a real page-turner, and I burned through it in a few days. I read the last quarter of it this afternoon. Highly recommend.
---------- Post added at 09:06 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:45 PM ----------
BTW, check out my blog for my running list of must-have SF books.