Caught in the Crossfire

by David Drake

Hammer's Slammers (Collections and Selections — Omnibus 2)

On This Page

Description

Mercenary leader Alois Hammer has created an armored regiment that wins battles--Hammer's Slammers. Booklist says Drake's popular Hammer's Slammers series about futuristic mercenary tank troops . . . has produced some of the best in military science fiction. This book contains two novels, Counting the Cost and The Warrior, two short stories, and a completely new novelette, arranged in the order the author finds most satisfactory.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

2 reviews
War stories are about fighting, of course, but the more thoughtful ones – like David Drake’s tales of Hammer’s Slammers, an mercenary regiment that fights other people’s wars on distant planets, unspecified centuries in the future – aren’t just (or even primarily) about that. They’re about the people who do the fighting, and what the experience of being in combat does to them. So it is with the stories in Caught in the Crossfire, the second in a series of omnibus volumes collecting the stories of the Slammers in (according to the publisher’s blurb) the order that Drake prefers.

Containing two novels originally published separately (The Warrior and Counting the Cost), along with two previously published short stories show more (“Caught in the Crossfire” and “Interrogation Team,”) and a novella written specifically for the book (“The Immovable Object”), Caught in the Crossfire certainly delivers good value for the money. It also delivers considerable variety. “The Warrior” is a dual character study that uses combat as a backdrop, and “Counting the Cost” is a meditation on the use of violence as a tool in domestic politics. “The Immovable Object” and “Caught in the Crossfire” look at the Slammers through the eyes of the locals whose wars they fight, and “Interrogation Team” lets one of the Slammers see the war he’s fighting literally through the eyes of a local, with unexpected results.

Every story in the book shows off Drake’s smooth professionalism as a writer, and if none of them quite approaches the brilliance of “Rolling Hot” – the best story in the earlier Slammers omnibus, The Tank Lords -- the collection is, as a whole, perhaps even better. It is, certainly, darker and grittier, with most stories ending on a note of grim resignation: “I’m alive, and the ones who shot at me are dead, and that makes it a good day.”
show less
It's a great one: Caught int he crossfire is a great read for Drake newbies. He's a wonderful author, and this book is one of many of his great Sci-fi works.

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Year 9 Reading List
29 works; 3 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
Author
269+ Works 34,928 Members
David Drake was born on September 24, 1945, in Dubuque, Iowa. He attended University of Iowa, where he graduated with a degree in History (with honors) and Latin. He then attended Duke Law School. He was drafted out of law school, served in the army for two years and then returned to school. He worked as an Assistant Town Attorney of Chapel Hill show more and then part-time as a city bus driver before he became a full-time writer. Drake is considered a master of Science Fiction and Fantasy. The Hammer's Slammers, military science fiction, was his first published series. His other titles include Northworld series, The Dragon Lord, Starliner, Ranks of Bronze, and Redliners. In recognition of his work, he won a World Fantasy award in 1976. He currently resides in North Carolina. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Caught in the Crossfire
Original publication date
1998-07; 1989
Disambiguation notice
David Drake is the author.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
BISAC

Statistics

Members
205
Popularity
159,893
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (3.59)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1