Oh, I thought it was Posleen universe. Still weird, but I guess we can give Stuart is creative lisence.
Mostly because it allows characters to live through multiple books.
And so, with some logic in hand and a vague series of images I set out to write a book. It was not intended to be published (indeed, until about three months before I sent Hymn Before Battle off to Baen Books I had never considered becoming a published author), but rather it was a book for me, something that I wanted to read, an alien invasion where the "good guys" (that's us) got to really sink their teeth into the bad guys (that's the Posleen). No gray areas, no ambiguity. Victory or death. Vive le morte! Once more unto the breach! Take that bunker or die trying!
That would be
any war of extermination. Armaggedon does that well, and making the Demons have higher tech (gunpowder) would make a good example.
Am I the only one who finds it hilarious that this backfired? He managed to put the Posleen in a gray light, and his political opponents in the baddie one.
I mean, if it isn't victory or death, what's the point? (Oh, Art? Excuse me while I laugh. Go read some of the reviews of Dickens.)
Well, he doesn't really understand the whole point of warfare. God, talk about not doing the research.
Take care and just remember; the good guys always win in the end.
I'm sorry... I shouldn't really talk- I mean I am young and stupid. Still, the fact that members of the board have come up with better stories using ground warfare in future hard sci-fi that aren't this stupid...
Did he actually bother to do the research or is the entire series based of Sci-fi cliches?