Genre: Science Fiction
Publisher: Marcher Lord Press
Publication Date: April 2009
Reviewed by Tim George
Imagine you are born into a culture entrenched in a strict cast system and you are from the lowest possible circumstances. Your only hope to advance beyond your lowly birth is to join the military and hopefully prove yourself worthy. After years of service as little more than a prison guard your day comes to show what you can do in graduating field exercises. The problem is the judges will never overlook your origins, so you must do far better than any other soldier to even hope to be passed.
Near the end of training, you find yourself in a cave where the missing child of an important official has been taken hostage. What happens in that cave ensures your place as a soldier but also leaves you with a dark secret that will follow you from that day forward. Not long after joining your first field unit, its commanding officer volunteers for a mission to provide security for, of all things, engineers. Little could your unit know what this simple and potentially boring mission will mean for you or the entire world.
Now imagine this all happens on a distant planet whose history is shrouded in the Dread, a gnawing fear that discourages its inhabitants from digging too deeply into their past. Only a few have faith in who they believe to be the one true creator while most, like you, believe in nothing but themselves and the Karn Empire. You are a simple solider who will face extraordinary situations, enemies, and decisions you never imagined (except in your dreams). Oh did I mention? You are a Yanguch of the planet Saurin. You are eleven feet tall, eighteen feet long and have skin that is blue-green with maroon speckles.
Stockton has spent much of his life building the mythos of the Starfire world and it shows in the richness of its characters and story of his debut novel. To be honest, I haven’t read fantasy or this kind of Science fiction in many years but Stockton has wet my appetite for more. Marcher Lord Press is committed to bringing a genre of fiction authors have had great difficulty in finding a publisher for. If Stuart Stockton’s work is an indicator of this imprints future, we have much more to look forward to from Marcher Lord Press!




1 Response
Starfire is an awesome book! I love the charts in the front that show the shapes and sizes of each dinosaur as compared to each other. So creative. So fun!
Posted on July 10th, 2009 at 2:00 pm
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