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Shiva in Steel (Berserker Series/Fred Saberhagen)

Shiva in Steel (Berserker Series/Fred Saberhagen)

List Price: $23.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Started mediocre and got weaker.
Review: This is really quite weak compared to Saberhagen's earlier writings. Not terribly engrossing. if you're new to the Berserker series, start with a much earlier book. Only read this if you liked the Berserker series as a whole and are willing to spend time on the weakest member of the series.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: weak...
Review: This is really quite weak compared to Saberhagen's earlier writings. Not terribly engrossing. if you're new to the Berserker series, start with a much earlier book. Only read this if you liked the Berserker series as a whole and are willing to spend time on the weakest member of the series.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Solid, Fascinating Addition to the Berkserker Canon
Review: Well, hey, I've been reading Berserker stories for over 20 years, and I truely enjoyed this one. The premise: a Berserker machine has been showing tactical genius, Shiva. The humans prepare a desperate plan to infiltrate Berserker territory to destroy it before it can be replicated. What made the book special for me was that around the time the characters training for the infiltration scheme start to comprehend the mad futility in light of the scanty resources, the plot takes an unexpected turn. What started to feel a bit like a "Guns of Navarone" kind of adventure suddenly, but quite logically, jumps the track. The last half of the book is particularly rich in ironic twists and turns. And the ambiguity about Shiva part of the theme that runs through the whole denoument. I found the character mix fascinating and suited to the tale.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Solid, Fascinating Addition to the Berkserker Canon
Review: Well, hey, I've been reading Berserker stories for over 20 years, and I truely enjoyed this one. The premise: a Berserker machine has been showing tactical genius, Shiva. The humans prepare a desperate plan to infiltrate Berserker territory to destroy it before it can be replicated. What made the book special for me was that around the time the characters training for the infiltration scheme start to comprehend the mad futility in light of the scanty resources, the plot takes an unexpected turn. What started to feel a bit like a "Guns of Navarone" kind of adventure suddenly, but quite logically, jumps the track. The last half of the book is particularly rich in ironic twists and turns. And the ambiguity about Shiva part of the theme that runs through the whole denoument. I found the character mix fascinating and suited to the tale.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: the horror, the horror...
Review: When Saberhagen is not repeating himself in every other paragraph, heis contradicting himself. The reader is left scratching his head as characters will often describe something (for example), that's wonderfully complex, then two pages later refer to the same thing as "barebone".

It can't be both Fred...

Topping off the grade-school level of consistency in the presentation of facts in this book is the plot with gaping holes in it.

Let's see... the Solarians establish a base out in the middle of nowhere with their most prized secrets in it. Except that there's no defenses to speak of.

The most important task force ever consists of six ships, which are shot up completely by some Berzerkers in passing.

A very prudent commander is specifically told to be careful of enemy agents, then simply solicits volounteer help from what's essentially a planet of outcasts, allowing the agent to waltz in.

Of course, this agent actually doesn't want to hurt the base or want anything in it... so the warning of course should never have come.

The most tactically superior thinking machine to ever grace the Berzerker cause runs a pretty damn stupid campaign against a sitting-duck base. My Atari 2600 would be a more formidable opponent....

I will never touch another book by "Saberhagen" again. This book is an incomplete work and the publisher should be ashamed for printing it and taking people's money.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Padded, clumsy and slow. Worst Saberhagen I've read.
Review: ______________________________________________
I made it through Saberhagen's new Berserker novel, but just barely
-- the opening moves like rush-hour traffic in L.A.: S - L - O - W.
Once it gets moving [around p. 160(!)] it's not too bad. Inside the
padding is a pretty decent novellette struggling to get out. Maybe. The
characters are so flat, cardboard looks well-rounded. Plot-threads
dangle, and logical holes gape. Saberhagen clearly lost interest at the
first draft, and his editor didn't send it back for a badly-needed rewrite
(bad Tor!). Is he in poor health?

Shiva in Steel somehow got a good review in Locus, which is why I
bought it (besides having liked previous Berserker stories). So I
suppose YMMV, but I doubt it. Trust me -- you don't want to read
this one. Reread an old Berserker book instead. It's bad enough, I feel
guilty recycling it to the used bookstore.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Padded, clumsy and slow. Worst Saberhagen I've read.
Review: ______________________________________________
I made it through Saberhagen's new Berserker novel, but just barely
-- the opening moves like rush-hour traffic in L.A.: S - L - O - W.
Once it gets moving [around p. 160(!)] it's not too bad. Inside the
padding is a pretty decent novellette struggling to get out. Maybe. The
characters are so flat, cardboard looks well-rounded. Plot-threads
dangle, and logical holes gape. Saberhagen clearly lost interest at the
first draft, and his editor didn't send it back for a badly-needed rewrite
(bad Tor!). Is he in poor health?

Shiva in Steel somehow got a good review in Locus, which is why I
bought it (besides having liked previous Berserker stories). So I
suppose YMMV, but I doubt it. Trust me -- you don't want to read
this one. Reread an old Berserker book instead. It's bad enough, I feel
guilty recycling it to the used bookstore.


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