Ebook The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley

By Tanya Richards on Monday, May 20, 2019

Ebook The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley



Download As PDF : The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley

Download PDF The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley

From the Hugo Award­­-winning author of The Stars Are Legion comes a brand-new science fiction thriller about a futuristic war.

They said the war would turn us into light... 

The Light Brigade it's what soldiers fighting the war against Mars call the ones who come back...different. Grunts in the corporate corps get busted down into light to travel to and from interplanetary battlefronts. Everyone is changed by what the corps must do in order to break them down into light. Those who survive learn to stick to the mission brief--no matter what actually happens during combat.

Dietz, a fresh recruit in the infantry, begins to experience combat drops that don't sync up with the platoon's. And Dietz's bad drops tell a story of the war that's not at all what the corporate brass want the soldiers to think it is.

Is Dietz really experiencing the war differently, or is it combat madness? Trying to untangle memory from mission brief and survive with sanity intact, Dietz is ready to become a hero--or maybe a villain; in war it's hard to tell the difference.

A worthy successor to classic stories like Downbelow Station, Starship Troopers, and The Forever War, The Light Brigade is award-winning author Kameron Hurley's gritty time-bending take on the future of war.

Ebook The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley


"Kameron Hurley has been my favorite author for a couple of years now. This novel checks all the familiar Hurley boxes in a surprisingly cozy way, probably due to the subtly familiar pop culture references scattered throughout the narrative. Gore, amnesia, missions gone wrong, watching a lover’s body splatter, Sisyphean attempts to fix a broken timeline... only thing missing this time were the bugs.

Like Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, this is a novel about a soldier who’s come unstuck in time. Both novels have biting social commentary and a solid sense of the absurd but are written with great love and compassion for humanity. This book just happens to contain much more grimdark content. Vonnegut was much kinder to Billy Pilgrim than Hurley is to Dietz. Stick with it; the ending is worth all the guts and gore.

In many ways, this is her best work yet. I can’t wait to reread it.

See you in the future. Be the light!"

Product details

  • File Size 2986 KB
  • Print Length 369 pages
  • Publisher Gallery / Saga Press (March 19, 2019)
  • Publication Date March 19, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B075RQ63DZ

Read The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley

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The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley Reviews :


The Light Brigade eBook Kameron Hurley Reviews


  • This was a difficult book for me to review. It basically comes down to two separate reviews.

    Science fiction has, at it’s best, always had challenging sociopolitical messages. Obviously, it also challenged what was considered scientific dogma of the time.

    On the later, I really enjoyed the book. Her sci-fi concepts of traveling as light were really interesting. The consequences of early practice in that mode of travel were suitably horrifying. Her description of battlefields were to me very realistic. That for me would have merited a 4/5 rating. Not a 5/5 because I though character development was lacking.

    Her sociopolitical commentary for me was very problematic. It was very simplistic warmed over pseudomarxism. The big bad corporations take over and control everyone’s lives as a proxy for governmental control. She makes a comment about Ayn Rand that tells me she has no real idea of Rand’s philosophy. Somehow, if we can just escape big corporations all will be better. It’s extremely simplistic and denies historical advances made on the half of the individual by real freedom. This part gets a 1/5 or at best a 2/5 in my grading system.

    So, overall, this is a mixed bag. It was good at times, sometimes riveting and often annoying. I don’t mind sociopolitical commentary challenging my belief system, however, this didn’t come close to measuring up to that mark.
  • Kameron Hurley has been my favorite author for a couple of years now. This novel checks all the familiar Hurley boxes in a surprisingly cozy way, probably due to the subtly familiar pop culture references scattered throughout the narrative. Gore, amnesia, missions gone wrong, watching a lover’s body splatter, Sisyphean attempts to fix a broken timeline... only thing missing this time were the bugs.

    Like Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, this is a novel about a soldier who’s come unstuck in time. Both novels have biting social commentary and a solid sense of the absurd but are written with great love and compassion for humanity. This book just happens to contain much more grimdark content. Vonnegut was much kinder to Billy Pilgrim than Hurley is to Dietz. Stick with it; the ending is worth all the guts and gore.

    In many ways, this is her best work yet. I can’t wait to reread it.

    See you in the future. Be the light!
  • Kameron Hurley is back to top form with a book that seems to have become an instant military sci fi classic. After Martian insurgents annihilate her home city of São Paulo, 18-year-old Dietz joins the army to seek retribution for the death of her family. A revolutionary technology makes deployment nearly instantaneous, with soldiers broken down into photons and shipped off to Mars at the speed of light. But instead of only being transported in space, Dietz also ends up randomly jumping back and forth in time. As she sees more and more glimpses of the future, she gradually starts to realise that there is something horribly wrong with both the war and its outcome. Will Dietz just stand by and watch or will she actually do something about it?

    This is easily Hurley's best work to date it is gritty, it is action-packed, it is horrific, it is utterly realistic in all of its grim details, but despite this—or rather, because of it—it also somehow still conveys a very powerful anti-war message. It is so, so seldom that an author can capture so beautifully the soldier's fundamental dilemma—that you need to fire that shot and execute that order because if you do not, it is your family’s and your comrades’ and your own life that hang in the balance. Yet this does not stop you from seeing and realising how ugly, pointless and awful warfare is and how it, in the final analysis, only serves the interests of those in power. Those whose lives will never even be touched by it.

    I have hardly ever seen Hurley so spot on dialling back on both the weird and the gender issues and instead focusing on a simple, universal and timeless truth that seems to hit right at home. And unsurprisingly, only 2 weeks after publication, the novel has garnered universal acclaim and drawn comparisons to both Starship Troopers and The Forever War. This is the best new release I have read so far this year, and its high-octane, no-nonsense plot and powerful message are likely to make The Light Brigade one of the main contenders for best sci fi book of 2019.

    Finally, I hate to mix in politics in a book review, BUT I have already seen backlash, not against the book per se, but against Hurley for supposedly ‘pushing Marxist ideas’, accusations that have left me speechless. The Light Brigade's world is a future where nations have been dissolved and replaced with corporations that literally own you. A future where fundamental human rights are but a rumoured relic of the past and where you can be murdered or thrown into the gutter at the whim of any corporate executive. To call advocating universal suffrage, healthcare and pension as well as basic human rights ‘pushing Marxism’ is daft at best. These are actually the tenets of the European welfare state, which is still capitalist at its core and which—surprise, surprise—does actually work. What does NOT work is having to mortgage your house to cover your hospital bill or have someone pull out your teeth because you cannot afford dental. Get this in your heads at last.
  • I don't doubt that this is a clever book or that it's a propaganda piece. That doesn't make it a good sci fi read. The very elements that make it clever time jumps, ambiguous persona, shifting ancillary characters- makes this work hard to care about. I think I got the gist of the politics and the science fiction, and grokked the synthesis of the two, and saved myself several unenjoyable hours of confusion. Read till you're sufficiently flummoxed (and, if you like, dazzled by the author's ambition) then skip to the last interview and finish it out with head held high. It's a magic trick, folks, and reading a tome just to find out how it works won't enable you to enjoy the trick more. It will have the opposite effect, in fact. If you value your time spent with good books, quit this one while you're ahead.