Reviews

The Praxis: Dread Empire's Fall by Walter Jon Williams

timinbc's review

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3.0

Let's be fair, this was written 15+ years ago.

Essentially, it's a pretty good story, with good lead characters surrounded by cardboard cutouts.
There's action, and hard-SF detail. Some of the detail is good, some cringeworthy.

First, let me address nearly ALL of the space opera books out there. Can someone please write one that doesn't end with two fleets fighting, with hundreds of gigantic spaceships exploding in huge fireballs? Or convince me that a system in which a force routinely loses a mega-quadrillion-dollar asset and thousands of crew to a single shot from an (adjective)(noun) can be thought to be sustainable. Why giant ships? Why crews of thousands?

Martinez is, ho-hum, capable but scorned because of his background. Yeah. no one's ever used that character before. But I will forgive that because of Sula's back story. Even though that back story is handled clumsily and the key event telegraphed hundreds of pages before it happens.

And then the loyal batman, this time called Alikhan instead of the usual McGregor, but he's the same guy. He's Digby from "Dan Dare," which I read in the fifties! He's Jeeves. He's The One Man I Can Trust, and luckily he has a vast array of skills.

Then we come to the space navy. OK, hidebound and not too realistic because of centuries of peace. But gee gosh, people who can use wormholes and antimatter are not going to use tactics that Sir Francis Drake could have defeated, let alone Nelson.

And the Foote family. Ah, that was tolerable, until Martinez needed rescuing. Everyone's zinging around, wormholing and slingshotting around planets, Martinez takes off in no particular direction, and is rescued by, well, gosh, look, it's his old buddy Foote. What a lucky coincidence! Wait, was that Sula that got rescued that way? Whatever.

I award points for the alcoholic crew members. I deduct them for the cartoonish soccer tournament part of the plot.

Good for Williams for getting the part about how much velocity matters when you're using wormholes. He goes on too long about it, but at least does it. BUT ... delta-vee is CHANGE in velocity, not just velocity (which is speed+direction). It measures what has to be done to change from one velocity to another. To go faster or slower or in a different direction, you need delta-vee, and you get it by converting energy in one way or another - burning fuel or using up kinetic or potential energy (which includes slingshotting around a planet). Navigators who do that well usually end up on the winning side.

I was also fascinated by another aspect of navigation: the way the fleets turn by rotating all the ships then blasting away directly at the target. Even while travelling 0.7c. I imagine they had to do a lot of corrective steering.

Speaking of 0.7c, g0sh, no time dilation? No discussion of how everything's travelling so fast that there is no way humans are operating anything? All humans can do - and to Williams' credit he uses this one - is leave things in the way for the fast-moving ships to hit. I accept having antimatter and wormholes but no AI; SF authors get to make that choice.

But still ... we want Sula and Martinez to cross paths, and this is the story of how they do, and for all its faults I will read the next one.

framfart's review against another edition

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adventurous tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.25

joshts11's review

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Too slow and not captivating enough. Not my type of book 

wassir13's review against another edition

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5.0

Great space opera

Well written space opera but hey, it’s by Walter Jon Williams. Good character development and pacing. Perfect for the beach.

ward_ja's review

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5.0

Really good space opera ( tough to find).

colepsmith42's review

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3.0

Fine. A little scattered and seems like it was broken up from the larger whole just for publication. Kinda leaves off without feeling very resolved.

manzabar's review

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3.0

Starts off a bit slow but once it picks up speed, it flies by right till the end.

hagbard_celine's review

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3.0

Snappy little military space battle thingy. Will continue series.

medium_dave's review

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4.0

Very good sci-fi. Hundreds of years after most of the galaxy got their asses kicked, everyone is part of the Praxis. This isn't a book that takes place as humanity is defending itself; we already lost and assimilated.

It's real good setting, lot's of good world building, a couple of solid leads. Honestly, the only real problem I had was a repeated flashback delve into the backstory of one of the leads. I thought it was clear early on what was going to happen, but 50 plus pages were spent on something that could've been done, all at once, in a single chapter.

Other than that, I was a huge fan and have already added the next book to my Amazon wish list.

blue_jules's review

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Finished "The Praxis" by Walter Jon Williams. It's an Age of Sail-type SF: FTL travel by wormholes, no FTL communication except by courier, wormholes are far and between, so long travel times at high acceleration and speeds approaching the speed of light are necessary.

(Relativistic effects such as time dilation are not discussed; the highest velocities are around 0.7c, where they should be noticeable...)

Such a universe surely is in need of an empire.

This empire is founded by the alien Shaa on the Praxis, an ideology of strict rule enforcement and the thought that "all important things are known". They have conquered some other species including humans and brutally incorporated them into their empire and ideology as willing followers.

But the last Shaa dies, and of course the empire changes. "The Praxis" second half deals with the military fallout of these changes, following two officers: Martinez and Sula.

Their society is hierarchical, with Peers dominating politics and the military, and commoners having little chances. Women can be pilots and even Fleet Commanders, but are still subjected to arranged marriages or, if poor, pimped out. I'm not sure how that can work...

Through Martinez, we get to see the Peers and their politicking; through Sula's past, we get to see how life is in the society's criminal underbelly. Both have depth and strong characters.

There's nice orbital mechanics here: high-g burns and slingshots, which I enjoy (like the early The Expanse novels); it's interesting to see an empire without an expansion drive, without any wars of conquest in the part (like the Radch in "Ancillary Justice"). 

The technology restrictions imposed by the Praxis are interesting (no nanotech, no AI, no genetic manipulation), but nothing much is done with them.

Not sure I'll be read the whole (long) series...