Ok, now that I've read SoV and this entire thread, which I'm certainly glad I read before posting my impression of the book, here I go.
Unfortunately, I was under the impression that this was going to be a mainline novel, when the "Shadow of" part of the title should have tipped us all off that this would be another Talbott sector novel. I don't know where I read that this book would advance the main plot. It wasn't from the eARC description on Baen's site, so it must have been somewhere in the forums. So
somebody besides RFC or Baen is to blame for that!
Anyway, my major mistake was getting excited because after four years we were
finally going to see the Battle of Beowulf!
So when the first snippets arrived beginning in February 1921 PD, I was disappointed. Not because they didn't make good reading - I rather enjoyed learning how Damien Harahap was recruited by Mesa, and I didn't realize just how handy he was in a scrap.
Still sure that the Battle of Beowulf was just around the corner, I plunged on, and my heart sank when not just one, but two new verge planets were introduced with DH fomenting rebellion and offering "Mantie help." That's my own fault for
not reading the description of the book on Baen when I downloaded it! The description is
entirely accurate with what SoV contains, but my expectations weren't.
I'm a
fanatic of the Safehold series, which is where you'll find the
vast majority of my posts, and I've long ago learned to identify the weirdly spelled names by the appearance of the letters in them rather than sounding them out, with the exception of the major characters and the ones who are actual historical people, like Paitryk Hainree. So the Czech and Polish names automatically became "Collection of letters designating this character" and most organizations just became "group of foreign words I won't worry about." Sokol being the only easy to recall organization on either planet that I recall. I confess that when a new section began, I often didn't know if it referred to the Polish or Czech planets for a paragraph or two. Lazy reading to be sure, and there's probably some fun tidbits that I missed by reading that way. (There always are in Safehold!)
Once the flashbacks to events in the Manticore system that appeared in previous books began, I lost faith that the plot would move past SoF and that I'd finally get to see the long-awaited Battle of Beowulf. (But I refused to peek ahead!) I have to give RFC credit, the description of the destruction of the Hephaestus as witnessed by Sinead Terekhov was some of his finest writing, and I was properly horrified by the spectacle and
sincerely worried for her life!
I
really appreciated that there was no cutting and pasting from previous novels. ART and SoF (or one of the Shadow novels, I'm too lazy to look it up) had entire sections that were cut and pasted. Hey, no problem since they were background material to bring new readers up to speed, so I just skipped past them, but there was none of that in SoV, which presented events we'd already seen from new viewpoints and perspectives. Kudos to RFC for that!
So I enjoyed all the scenes in Manticore and the fleshing out of some characters - particularly Aivars Terekhov. Nice to see Scotty Tremaine has been promoted to captain, and in a combat role to boot! I can't tell if "Sir Prescott Tremaine" and "Scotty Tremaine" are the same person, since the names seem to be used interchangeably as the captain of the HMS Alistair McKeon. (Nice touch!) Is that an editing mistake, or does it reflect a formal vs. informal name for Captain Tremaine?
Like others have noted, one planet rebelling against its corrupt government seemed to merge with the next one, until I had trouble telling them apart as the Manties arrived to see if Mesa had stirred up rebellions among the locals with promises of Mantie ships when needed. (Even when the locals were peaceful and a visit was a dud.) I have a bad habit of complaining that RFC's books are too short - I read them only in eBook format, since that's easiest for me so I don't
care how big the paper book might be! So it would be hypocritical of me to complain about all the detail we were given of the rebellions on each planet! It's just that there were so many to keep track of that it was a bit difficult to remember the details of who lived where and what they'd done. Obviously a second reading will clarify things.
I was glad to see the Manties arriving (usually) in time, and I understand that the scope of the unrest that DH had been fomenting needed to be shown, but we got a lot of detail on camera that could have been done off camera. (Says the guy who wishes we'd gotten a blow-by-blow of Filareta's fleet being blown to smithereens!) But c'mon, the Sollies deserve to have every battle that kicks their arrogant butts appear onscreen, even though RFC would consider describing the massacre of people who can't fight back as war porn. (Please sir, can't we have just a
little bit of porn?)
With DH captured, I'm hoping he spills his guts about which systems he's been working with, and that the Mesan nannites in his system don't kill him if he's interrogated. (Although he's pretty sure they'll kill him in the long run anyway if he doesn't get his "regular checkup.")
I enjoyed Gold Peak and Tourville's interactions, and the Manties and Havenites burying the hatchets that some of them still carried toward each other. Tourville's treecat is a hoot! I just wish it would bond with him...
I
really wish that Gold Peak had headed straight for Mesa months ago, which would have put a
huge crimp in Operation Houdini. (I was screaming for her to do it in SoF before she header for Meyers!) Heck, I thought the
Andermanis would have headed straight for it during ART, since that seemed to be what the GA was planning and
nobody wanted Mesa's head on a plate more than the Andermanis did. I guess that's one of those false trails RFC drops here and there and everywhere!
Deitweiler's exit - and his method of tying up the remaining loose ends of Operation Houdini was a surprise. I realize from the text that he felt his job was done, but I thought he'd have left for Darius ages ago, and would have led the alignment until even Mesan Prolong couldn't keep him alive any longer. Maybe he figured Darius is a place for the young - which given the planet's average age is absolutely true! I'm guessing that his final solution will turn out to either not be as final as he expected, or that nuclear blasts leave behind more evidence than he anticipated. And if one of those blasts
didn't go off and the survivors realize that they were marked for extermination, that could leave a whole bunch of rather disgruntled Alignment members who may have lost faith in their mission and who are inner members of the onion. (I can dream that it happens at least!)
And then SoV ended, although I didn't scream like I did at the end of ART, which had the glossary attached, so I thought the Battle of Beowulf would begin on the next page and suddenly there
was no next page!
SoV brings all the disparate plot lines up to date, so when "End of Honor" shows up, (or whatever the next novel is called), we'll
finally see what the Solarian League does to Beowulf. (I predict an Eridani violation!)
I was amused that "Green Pines" was constantly referred to as "Green Valley," so it was clear that RFC is human and had Safehold in his subconscious now and then. This was actually the roughest eARC I've seen yet, which is easily explained by the last minute edits and I'm sure the misspellings, wrong words, and the incomplete sentences I noted here and there will be caught by the editors. Had I thought otherwise, I'd have noted them all and sent RFC a private message to pass along to them, but since he didn't ask us to proofread the eARC for Baen, I suppose it isn't our job. Frankly, I'm just tickled pink to get the book early, and I'm grateful to Baen that they make it possible for us rabid fans to do that.
So that's my review of SoV. It wasn't what I expected, which colored my enjoyment of it, but that was my
own fault for not reading the synopsis that Baen
plainly provided when I downloaded the eARC and I
should have read it, especially since I'd read the first three snippets and already realized that it was going back in time to fill in a lot of gaps in DH's activities in the Verge and to synchronize the various plot lines.
Yes, it's redundant in places. Yes, it adds two new rebelling planets with difficult names for those who don't speak Polish or Czech. (But all the action on those two planets is new, so no complaints!) It has a fun running space battle where Captain Tremaine gets to show the sneakiness he learned from serving with the Salamander. Best of all, it sets us up for the next book, which
will advance the plot past the capture of Mesa!
Battle of Beowulf anyone?