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The Dragon Never Sleeps
The Dragon Never Sleeps
Author: Glen Cook
For four thousand years, the Guardships have ruled Canon Space - immortal ships with an immortal crew, dealing swiftly and harshly with any mercantile houses or alien races that threaten the status quo. But now the House Tregesser has an edge: a force from outside Canon Space offers them the resources to throw off Guardship rule. This precipitat...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781597800990
ISBN-10: 1597800996
Publication Date: 2/1/2008
Pages: 288
Rating:
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
 3

3 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Night Shade Books
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

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Trey avatar reviewed The Dragon Never Sleeps on + 260 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I just finished this old (1988 - wait -that's not old is it?) space opera and I really found it enjoyable. Yes, its space opera. No brain bending ideas presented here.
But, if you like the idea of events on the interstellar scale also having a personal touch, then well, this book is for you. It all starts when a guard ship (one of the massive ships that safeguard Canon space) intercepts a freighter with an alien aboard that is supposed to be extinct... From there, it gets into the intrigues of the Great Houses (and I believe this bunch could teach the Harkonnen and Atreides lessons), the Guardships and its living and deified (recorded) crew members, survivors of conflicts with the guardships and living artifacts. Its wild, its twisted and I wish I'd read it earlier.
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nymphadora avatar reviewed The Dragon Never Sleeps on + 95 more book reviews
Reviewer: S. Batten "SB" (Tasmania, Australia) - See all my reviews

One of the best space operas I've read - my only complaint is that Glen Cook never wrote a sequel.
The story revolves around a Canon Guardship (think a massive starship the size of a moon with the firepower to obliterate a star system) and the attempts to break the grip of the guardship fleet on the galaxy. Add in issues with an immortal crew now several thousand years out of step with current society, a rebellion drawing on the resources of 100's of star systems, alien empires trying to covertly topple the system, a means of rapid interstellar travel created by some unknown race in the distant past, mix them all together and you have something bigger and much better than Star Wars.


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