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The Tuloriad, 11 - (Posleen War) by John Ringo & Tom Kratman (Paperback)

The Tuloriad, 11 - (Posleen War) by  John Ringo & Tom Kratman (Paperback)
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Last Price: 7.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Includes excerpt from: Overkill by Robert Buettner.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>First Time in Paperback. <p/>Latest in the <i>New York Times</i> best-selling Posleen War series. <p/>The Direct Sequel to <i>Yellow Eyes</i>.</b> <p/> The Enemy of My Enemy . . . <p/> Of the once innumerable battle clans of the Posleen only a handful survive. And that on the sufferance of a group of despised Indowy and Himmit. Plucked from the maelstrom on Earth they are cast out into the eternal blackness of the stars with only a slightly insane Indowy and a computer virus to guide them. <p/> What follows is a trail of tears and remembrance as the Posleen retrace the footsteps of their ancestors in a search for their homeworld. A search to determine if the Posleen posess the one thing no Human would give them credit for: A soul. <p/> Returned to their beginnings, the question remains: Is there a new path for the Tular Posleen?<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"As its Homeric-sounding name suggests, the latest Posleen War novel (after 2007's "Yellow Eyes") tells of a defeated people fleeing annihilation in search of a new home... They embark upon a search for the origin of their species and discover just how cruelly their people were treated long ago when their ancestors dared to question the godlike Aldenata... Ringo and Kratman turn this space adventure into an intriguing discussion of the power of faith apart from the existence of God." -- "Publishers Weekly" (Oct.)<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>John Ringo</b> brings fighting to life. He is the creator of the Posleen Wars series, which has become a <i>New York Times </i>best-selling series with more than one million copies in print. The series contains <i>A Hymn Before Battle, </i> <i>Gust Front</i>, <i>When the Devil Dances</i>, <i>Hell's Faire, </i> and <i>Eye of the Storm</i>. In addition, Ringo has penned the Council War series. Adding another dimension to his skills, Ringo created nationally best-selling techno-thriller novels about Mike Harmon (<i>Ghost</i>, <i>Kildar</i>, <i>Choosers of the Slain</i>, <i>Unto the Breach</i>, and <i>A Deeper Blue</i>). His techno-thriller <i>The Last Centurion </i>was also a national bestseller. A more playful twist on the future is found in novels of the Looking-Glass series: <i>Into the Looking Glass</i>, <i>Vorpal Blade</i>, <i>Manxome Foe, </i> and <i>Claws That Catch</i>, the last three in collaboration with Travis S. Taylor. His audience was further enhanced with four collaborations with fellow <i>New York Times</i> best-selling author David Weber: <i>March Upcountry</i>, <i> March to the Sea</i>, <i>March to the Stars, </i>and <i>We Few</i>. There are an additional seven collaborations from the Posleen series: <i>The Hero</i>, written with Michael Z. Williamson, <i>Watch on the Rhine</i>, <i>Yellow Eyes, </i> and <i>The Tuloriad</i>, all written with Tom Kratman, and the <i>New York Times</i> bestseller <i>Cally's War</i> and its sequels <i>Sister Time</i> and <i>Honor of the Clan</i>, all with Julie Cochrane. His science-based zombie apocalypse Black Tide Rising series includes <i>Under a Graveyard Sky, To Sail a Darkling Sea, Islands of Rage and Hope, </i> and <i>Strands of Sorrow. </i>A veteran of the 82nd Airborne, Ringo brings firsthand knowledge of military operations to his fiction. <p/>In 1974, at age seventeen, <b>Tom Kratman</b> became a political refugee and defector from the PRM (People's Republic of Massachusetts) by virtue of joining the Regular Army. He stayed a Regular Army infantryman most of his adult life, returning to Massachusetts as an unofficial dissident while attending Boston College after his first hitch. Back in the Army, he managed to do just about everything there was to do at one time or another. After the Gulf War, with the bottom dropping completely out of the anti-communist market, Tom decided to become a lawyer. Every now and again, when the frustrations of legal life and having to deal with <i>other</i> lawyers got to be too much, Tom would rejoin the Army (or a somewhat similar group, say) for fun and frolic in other climes. His family, muttering darkly, put up with this for <i>years</i>. He no longer practices law, instead writing full-time for Baen. His novels for Baen include <i>A State of Disobedience, Caliphate</i>, and the series consisting of <i>A Desert Called Peace, Carnifex, The Lotus Eaters, The Amazon Legion, Come and Take Them</i>, <i>The Rods and the Axe</i>, and <i>A Pillar of Fire by Night. </i>He has written novels with John Ringo: <i>Watch on the Rhine, Yellow Eyes</i>, and <i>The Tuloriad.</i> Also for Baen, he has written the first three volumes of the modern-day military fiction series Countdown.

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