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The Invaders Plan (Mission Earth Series)

The Invaders Plan (Mission Earth Series)

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Parental Advisory Suggested
Review: First off, this series is unique and starts off great. I've never read anything quite like it: epic sci-fi told from the point of view of the bad guys.

So rather than having a book follow the main hero character and the way he easily thwarts all the bad guys, we instead see it told from the perspective of those bad guys, how they lay all these intricate traps and their befuddlement as the hero inexplicably manages to thwart their every evil move, sometimes without trying. It's intentionally funny in a very Wile E. Coyote sort of way.

But there's two warnings I think have to be said:
1) For readers in general, the series peters out starting around book 7. It's like he ran out of gas after 6 books but really wanted a set of 10 so pushed out 3 more books. The ending is disappointing and the last books are like a punishment to read.

2) PARENTAL WARNING, EXTREME PERVERSION. If they made a loyal movie out of this series, it would not be rated NC-17, it would actually be illegal in most civilized countries, and that's no exaggeration. It starts off innocently enough but eventually gets into some of the worst perversion you'll ever read in a book. Sex with a corpse isn't even the worst of it. The fact that more people don't comment on this leads me to believe most people never read the whole series. The review that mentioned therapy was not even kidding.

So in the end I'm not sure what to say about it. The books always stand out in my mind because of the perspective and humor of seeing things from the bad guy's viewpoint, but I never actually suggest this series to friends because it's so absurdly perverted in places. Having read this series as the first thing I've ever read by Hubbard is a big part of why I never took his Scientology and other stuff seriously: L. Ron Hubbard was not right in the head and there's no way you can read this whole series and not arrive at the same conclusion.

If you're 18 or over, go for it, but I wouldn't suggest buying this series for your kids.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent example of Dark Satire
Review: I started the Mission Earth series when I was about 10 because I liked the cover. It was probably the first sci fi novel I have ever read. I'm really glad it was Hubbard who introduced me to science fiction, and I'm glad I read the book before I knew anything about scientology or Hubbard, since it gave me the chance to go into the novel unbiased.

The great thing about the Mission Earth series is, as others have mentioned, it's told from the first person POV of Soltan Gris, a coniving, weasly, agent who uses blackmail, extortion, and murder to try and maintain his power in the agency over Jetro Heller, the James-Bondish "hero" of the series with the Devilish good lucks and amazing talent. The great thing abot HUbbard's writing, is that you don't root for Heller to succeed. Seeing everything from Soltan's point of view creates a lot of sympathy and drawsyour favor toward him.

The entire series can get a bit monotonous at times and hard to make it through, but I can never forget the guilty pleasures and immense enjoyment I had when I first started reading this series.


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