Zaune wrote:I made the mistake of paying money for the sequel to Freehold, whose title escapes me, and it's possibly the worst book I've ever read.
The Weapon. Which lowered my already low opinion of Williamson. (Yes, I too was unfortunate/stupid enough to read it.)
Basically, the first book is half lame characterisation and half wankery over how AWESOME!!! the Freehold is because of its lolbertarian politics. Everyone walks around with guns all the time because the private citizen is so much better at defending himself from criminals than a police force is, being a hooker is a high-status celebrity job that every girl aspires to, and even the street gangs are nice to people because . . . Well, just because, basically.
But
The Weapon is worse. It has somewhat less of the overt preaching, but instead we get 600+ pages of first-person narrative by an insufferably smug and sociopathic Mary Sue special forces trooper who totally approves of how awesome the system is in every way, and anyone who does not like it is either a subhuman idiot or a dog-raping, child-kicking villain.
The Legacy of the Aldenata series might have been a thinly disguised continuity-reboot fanfic of Starship Troopers written by someone who actually liked the original, but at least Ringo has the decency not to make the alleged good guys of the book commit terrorist atrocities that kill hundreds of thousands of civilians and claim it's perfectly justified by the fact that they're governed by straw liberals.
It was more like billions.
The really hilarious thing, though, is that a couple of hundred pages
earlier in the book, when he is dealing with militant Islam on some Third World planet, Mr.Super Commando has a minor
author tract soliloquy where he specifically denounces terrorists who strike at civilians as weak, unmanly (these are the worst things you can be, of course) and generally loathsome and abominable filth. As I said, not only is Williamson crazy politically, he is a huge hypocrite also.
Simon_Jester wrote:I think the problem came when Ringo's work (which is right on the ragged edge of how crappy you can make military SF before the crappiness starts to overrun the entertainment value) drew in other people who were even less good than Ringo, and even nuttier politically (Kratman being the prime example).
I object to that. Kratman is objectively a better author than Ringo, both in being better at writing and in being, overall, more reasonable with his tech and tactics.
Of course, it is true that politically, he is insane, and arguably worse than Ringo.