Customer Reviews for A Talent For War

A Talent For War by Jack McDevitt

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Book Reviews of A Talent For War

Book Review: A Great Man of War
Summary: 5 Stars

A Talent For War (1989) is the first SF novel in the Alex/Chase series. It has been two hundred years since the war between the Confederacy and the Ashiyyur and hostilities have begun once more. At home, the Capella failed to appear at Saraglia Station and is presumed lost without any survivors; while other liners have been lost in the past, the Capella is one of the largest and best equipped ships in the merchant fleet.

In this novel, Alex Benedict hears about the official loss while haggling over a collection of four thousand year old ceramic pots. About ten days afterward, Alex learns that Gabe Benedict, his uncle and foster father, was lost with the Capella. Alex receives two sponders from the law firm of Brimbury & Conn; playing the devices, he learns that Gabe had been investigating an incident that caused the Survey ship Tenandrome to return early from a voyage into the Veiled Lady nebula. Gabe had apparently talked with Hugh Scott from the Tenandrome. He also mentions Leisha Tanner and Ludik Talino.

Returning to Rimway, Alex contacts Brimbury & Conn to let them know that he is back in Andiquar, then takes a skimmer to Gabe's house, where Jacob -- a sophisticated data response network -- admits him. After a while, Jacob informs Alex that he doesn't directly remember their interactions since a breakin had resulted in the erasure of all his memories. Later Jacob provides Alex with information off the network on Leisha Tanner, who had served as intelligence chief for Christopher Sims during the Confederacy/Ashiyyur War.

Checking with Survey, Alex finds that the Tenandrome had a quick turnaround back to the field and that there is still an unusual amount of secrecy about the voyage within the organization. Survey refuses to provide any information on the crew, including Hugh Scott. During further attempts to locate Scott, Alex finds that he has vanished.

Alex meets Chase Kolpath when she approaches him with a bill for services rendered to his uncle. Gabe had hired her to accompany him into the Veiled Lady from Saraglia. This is rather unusual since Gabe himself is a licensed starship pilot. Alex later finds that Gabe was traveling with John Khyber, a security consultant and a member of the Talino Society. When Alex investigates the Society, he discovers that it is a group of Confederacy/Ashiyyur War fans who profess to believe that Talino did not betray Christopher Sims.

In this story, the many connections to the Confederacy/Ashiyyur War lead Alex to study it in earnest. He has Jacob compile information on various aspects of the war. He talks to avatars and observes battle simulations. He travels to various sites associated with Christopher or Tarien Sims or where the Sims fought the Ashiyyur. He even contacts the Maracaibo Caucus, an association of retired senior officers from both Human and Ashiyyur services.

Alex learns that, while other Human worlds had dithered and debated, Dellaconda had fought the Ashiyyur virtually alone for an extended period. Volunteers from other worlds fought alongside the Dellacondans and some worlds provided urgently need ships, but Dellaconda was always faced with overwhelming odds. Only Christopher Sims's talent for war and Tarien Sims's talent for oratory had kept all Human Space from being overrun, yet the Dellacondans had slowly lost ground. The Ashiyyur had been taking system after system. But even after Dellaconda fell to the enemy, the Sims managed to resist long enough for Human Space to join together in the Compact.

This story is a jigsaw puzzle, with the pieces hidden among the trivial facts of ordinary life. Alex gathers the significant pieces one by one, in jumbled order, and then puts them together to reconstruct Gabe's information and motivation. Alex and Chase then go to claim the prize, but also find an unpleasant surprise.

The author provides an engaging look at historical research, albeit in a future society. Moreover, it is research about a war. The fog of war is overlaid by the decay of history, a combination guaranteed to produce disinformation and confusion.

Highly recommended for McDevitt fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of high adventure and historical puzzles.

-Arthur W. Jordin

Book Review: A Talent for History
Summary: 5 Stars

This is the first book in Jack McDevitt's Alex Benedict series, in which Alex and his talented assistant Chase Kolpath meet for the first time. It is followed in the series by Polaris, Seeker, The Devil's Eye, and Echo. But is as yet unequalled in complexity and shear entertainment value. If you haven't yet read it, you haven't seen Jack McDevitt at his best.

Antiquities dealer Alex Benedict learns of Uncle Gabe's sudden death and finds himself custodian of his uncle's wealth, records and house--complete with its own resident artificial intelligence named Jacob. He also inherits a mystery his uncle was working on. Joined by Chase Kolpath, who did some related research for his uncle, Alex begins unraveling the tapestry of history. Beginning with the shortened and secret voyage of the Tenandrome to the Veiled Lady Nebula three years previously, they follow converging threads of evidence to Christopher Sim, leader and hero in a war with the alien Ashiyyur two centuries in the past. Something about the records of Sim's death doesn't ring true. And more than one hidden adversary doesn't want the official version of history challenged.

This story is archeological science fiction at its best. The author provides an almost overwhelming collection of historical records, conflicting accounts, and subtle clues. A few of the book's mysteries can be unraveled before the protagonist resolves them. Some will remain hidden, springing to light at unexpected moments. The author demonstrates mastery of good storytelling and of disciplined writing. The reader comes away with a healthy respect for historical research and an even healthier disrespect for unquestioned official versions of past events.

This book is highly recommended. It is a good tonic for anyone suffering from a low opinion of science fiction.

Book Review: A well-crafted science fiction adventure/mystery.
Summary: 5 Stars

Through 2010, Jack McDevitt has given us five novels in his Alex Benedict series. The title character and his comely pilot/assistant Chase Kolpath deal in artifacts and antiquities. Since the stories take place 11,000 years in the future, Alex and Chase have a huge number of items to recover and market. Human civilizations have risen and fallen and disappeared. A favorite artifact is a coffee mug recovered from the wardroom of a derelict interstellar warship. Depending on the ship, if the mug and the logo on it are genuine, the mug is worth much more than its weight in gold.

Each novel is easily readable, independently of the others. Reading them in order of publication is logical, however, allowing smooth identification with the characters. "A Talent for War" is the first in the series. We are introduced to Alex, and we learn how he meets Chase. Despite only 310 pages in paperback, the story is complicated. That is, agreeably complicated.

It begins with the peculiar death of Alex's Uncle Gabe, which results in Alex's inheritance of a large estate. Then a computer file is stolen from the estate. The investigation of one mystery leads to another mystery, the investigation of which leads to yet another mystery. Puzzle compounds puzzle. Alex and Chase travel around the interstellar community, searching documents, looking for a mysterious lost spaceship, immersing themselves in virtual reality to learn about the war between alien Mutes and humans.

Regarding scientific knowledge, Jack McDevitt is no wimp. But his characters are his forte. With only a few of his words, I find them convincing. Their adventures become real. Christopher Sim, the military leader of human forces against the Mutes, and Leisha Tanner, who bravely tries to persuade bellicose crowds from resorting to war--these are two of this particular novel's well-developed characters.

Alex and Chase are generic heroes that I am fond of. During long space voyages together, they do not remain physically aloof. Yet they never marry. Though they each have private relationships with other persons, they remain independent. Naturally.

Book Review: McDevitt's best book, written 17+ years ago.
Summary: 5 Stars

I read this when it was reprinted a few years ago, presumably due to the planned publishing of the sequel, Polaris. At the time I noted the 1989 copyright, but didn't think much of it. Having recently re-read it as well as having read all of McDevitt's other published works, I do think this is his best book overall.

This is essentially detective science fiction, following 2 characters as they initially try to unravel a mystery left by a dead uncle, then find themselves embroiled in increasingly dangerous events dealing with a major historic military figure and the strong indications that known items of his and his followers' stories are in serious conflict with each other and/or the truth. Eventually this becomes a major discovery of previously undisclosed information with major political ramifications among other things, and Alec Benedict becomes the target of more than one adversarial party with motives to disrupt his investigation.

McDevitt used a couple of plot devices from this book almost verbatim in Polaris - aircar sabotage and a break-in to his house to find a specific item pertinent to the plot, but that counts against the sequel, not this story. I do think this is the best of the Benedict/Chase stories as well.

It is a great story, the protagonists are far from perfect, the clues didn't hook up for me easily the first time (major plot revelations were indeed surprises), and I wish the author still wrote books like this.

Book Review: Great archaeological/historical mystery in hard sci-fi setting
Summary: 5 Stars

The uncle of a dealer of antiquities, Alex Benedict, dies and leaves him his fortune. The uncle was a prominent, if controversial, amateur archaeologist and was working on a project that could have Galactic repercussions. Benedict slowly becomes entangled in his uncle's work after he travels to his uncle's planet to resolve his affairs. Benedict first trys to figure out what his uncle was working on, and subsequently trys to finish the project. This is a hard sci-fi mystery in which the protagonist ultimately attempts to resolve a 200 year old enigma. McDevitt created an intricate, detailed, and believable history surrounding his characters. In fact, the history is so complex that it is sometimes hard to keep track of who did what. One thing that I really liked about this story was that the main character, Alex Benedict, was not some super brilliant, almost superhuman, scientist/soldier/poet/chef/entrepreneur. He has some human imperfections, and associates with many less than perfect people. In fact, he sells archaeological artifacts to private collectors. Almost certainly unethical, if not illegal, in our modern world. This story reminded me of Larry Niven's `Flatlander' stories about Gil `The Arm' Hamilton, although it is superior in my opinion. In spite of the title and cover art, this is definitely not in the `military sci-fi' genre, it is an archaeological mystery in a sci-fi setting. Intelligent, well-written sci-fi, highly recommended.
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