Daryl wrote:I've said all along that RFC probably didn't initially consider all the ramifications when he devised the unique physics for the Honorverse. Think of the energy needed to accelerate a 6MT SD(P) at 500 gravities for hours. Think of how hard it would be to hide waste heat when stealthing ships. Think of a pistol like pulsar where every dart has the muzzle energy of a 50 cal, yet people can fire bursts without extreme recoil.
The same physics would apply to heavy industry, but I imagine it would have to be in space to be practical.
No doubt you're correct Daryl, but as far as OBS and the first couple of books, the author had to balance not impinging on a readers intelligence, and appealing to those readers who don't care about the nuts and bolts. He has to draw readers in. I don't generally care about the nuts and bolts myself, and could care less about what's under the hood of a warship, just that it arrives just in time with the cavalry in tow. An author must try to appeal to all readers, at least in the beginning, to get as many as possible to wade out into the water so he can hook them.
There are just some readers who don't read books or consume movies with a sliderule. We just like the entertainment value and don't want to miss the forest for the trees wondering why Superman's arms of steel don't slice Lois into shreds when he suddenly catches her and breaks her fall.
I certainly understand, rather acknowledge, the type. One of my sisters is the worse kind. She hates Sci-Fi with a passion, and often thinks the authors are smoking schit that would make the Stilthies proud.
With OBS, RFC struck the perfect balance which reads exquisitely, not impeded by technical jargon losing the excitement and the intimacy of storyline in the forest. Making OBS the best space opera ever written.