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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On Black Friday, the aliens attacked. The human race was enslaved. But soon, everything will change.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      A story of alien invasion could be a narrator's nightmare. Starting with dozens of human voices and then having to create those of the invaders is a daunting task. Yet Luke Daniels is up to the challenge in this production, distinctively voicing not just the diverse humans but also the four classes of the invading Saurons. An allegory about racism, the production finds dark-skinned individuals, be they human or Sauron, in charge because that's how the aliens' caste system is organized. The oppressed groups hesitantly begin to band together just before this first book in the Sauron series ends. With a stark, matter-of-fact style, Daniels capably brings to life several armies of memorable characters. D.E.M. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 20, 2001
      Paranoids, take note. Bestselling military SF author Dietz (By Blood Alone; By Force of Arms; etc.) requires just the first six lines to destroy every major city on Earth in this overheated opener of a near-future alien-invasion epic, which reads much like an inferior clone of L. Ron Hubbard's Battlefield Earth. Several nations fire missiles at each other, not noticing colossal extraterrestrial spaceships hovering over the planet (neither does any astronomer). The huge, insect-like Saurons, nicknamed "chits" for their chitinous shells, kill billions. They enslave the survivors to construct "temples" that they claim will be a path to "a planet named Paradise" but are actually hatcheries where adult Saurons die giving birth. The invaders drop leaflets with instructions to bring them to "any Sauron-sponsored processing center and receive six cans of Spam," a courtesy possibly in response to human spacecraft offering galactic friendship. A plaque from Pioneer Ten, launched in 1972, served as "a space-going road map, pointing right at Earth." The aliens admit they surreptitiously "monitored thousands of audiovisual broadcasts," besides absorbing major languages and mapping technology. So those UFOs were
      real after all. The book abounds in racial hatreds at the same time that it high-mindedly condemns them. The action—constant, confusing, deadening and dull—abruptly halts, mid-slaughter, to announce, heroically, "the countdown continues" in a sequel slated for 2002. Be patient.

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  • English

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