Why am I passionate about this?
I grew up on a trail mix-style melange of 80’s action movies, Stephen King and The Lord of the Rings (with a special melancholy fondness also for The Once and Future King). High and low brow and everything in between that turned into a fascination for science fiction crossed with military adventure and doomed–or at least long-suffering–heroes. War is getting increasingly technological, detached, and even surreal, with drones, satellites, and hackers now increasingly on the front. But even as tactics and weapons change, the carnage doesn’t. From The Iliad to today, wars and the people who fight and die in them make for stories worth telling.
Victor's book list on war never changes except when it does
Why did Victor love this book?
We all love second chances, or at least the idea of them, fantasizing about the life we could have lived if we could do it all over again. This book reads like pure wish-fulfillment initially, with senior citizens having their minds transferred to cloned and upgraded young bodies and sent off to fight aliens.
And this book definitely hits me harder as I get older. But a second chance is also no guarantee that you’ll be any wiser (or luckier) this time around. Still, all in all, yeah, I’d be down for a super version of me that gets to fly around the universe.
10 authors picked Old Man's War as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Perfect for an entry-level sci-fi reader and the ideal addition to a veteran fan’s collection, John Scalzi's Old Man’s War will take audiences on a heart-stopping adventure into the far corners of the universe.
John Perry did two things on his 75th birthday. First he visited his wife's grave. Then he joined the army.
The good news is that humanity finally made it into interstellar space. The bad news is that planets fit to live on are scarce-and aliens willing to fight for them are common. The universe, it turns out, is a hostile place.
So: we fight. To defend…