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The Light Brigade
The Light Brigade
The Light Brigade
Audiobook10 hours

The Light Brigade

Written by Kameron Hurley and Jackie Sanders

Narrated by Cara Gee

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

NAMED BY PUBLISHERS WEEKLY AS A BEST BOOK OF 2019

Passionately brutal, fierce, and furious in voice and pace. It’s a particularly cinematic experience of war, Full Metal Jacket meets Edge of Tomorrow. —The New York Times

From the Hugo Award­­–winning author of The Stars Are Legion comes a science fiction thriller about a futuristic war during which soldiers are broken down into light in order to get them to the front lines on Mars.

They said the war would turn us into light.
I wanted to be counted among the heroes who gave us this better world.

The Light Brigade: it’s what soldiers fighting the war against Mars call the ones who come back…different. Grunts in the corporate corps get busted down into light to travel to and from interplanetary battlefronts. Everyone is changed by what the corps must do in order to break them down into light. Those who survive learn to stick to the mission brief—no matter what actually happens during combat.

Dietz, a fresh recruit in the infantry, begins to experience combat drops that don’t sync up with the platoon’s. And Dietz’s bad drops tell a story of the war that’s not at all what the corporate brass want the soldiers to think is going on.

Is Dietz really experiencing the war differently, or is it combat madness? Trying to untangle memory from mission brief and survive with sanity intact, Dietz is ready to become a hero—or maybe a villain; in war it’s hard to tell the difference.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 19, 2019
ISBN9781508280408
Author

Kameron Hurley

Kameron Hurley is the acclaimed author of the novels God’s War, The Mirror Empire, and The Light Brigade. Hurley has been awarded two Hugo Awards, the Kitschies Award for Best Debut Novel, and has also been a finalist for the Nebula Award, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, the British Science Fiction and Fantasy Award, and the Locus Award. Visit the author online at KameronHurley.com or on Twitter at @KameronHurley.

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Reviews for The Light Brigade

Rating: 4.121983935656837 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is amazing! It is a very hard read because at times it is so depressing and overwhelming. But, if you persevere, as the heroine does, you will be rewarded. It is a book that you should read slowly and think about. Particularly in light of what is happening now in our country and the world. I highly recommend this book.

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was very pleased with this book. Time well spent. Characters were awesome as was the world building. Best of all I felt intellectually stimulated.

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brilliant. Beautiful. Hauntingly beautiful.
    This is science fiction at it's best.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Very exciting start to what seemed to be a unique premise, eventually it just became preachy and derivative of other works. Primary character is tedious in her inconsistencies. I also don’t really understand the physiology of tiny characters with greater than human strength. The book made no interior sense of the world that it itself created.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For fans of Super Troopers and Ender’s Game who object to Orson Scott Card’s politics. Rich cast of characters, gripping storytelling, and poetic prose. Absolute winner for fans of Military Sci-Fi.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It’s a dark journey, everything capitalism/ corporate is bad and is the source of all the worlds ills. Seems like nothing good ever happen for the hero just misery and struggle, darkness and despair. As a conservative I hated the underlying message but the premise was so interesting I listen to whole book. The hero struggle was so deep I couldn’t help but stayed glued to find out how it ended.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I really liked it but ultimately the plot and mechanics were unsatisfying. However, I would still like to read more by this author.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is THE LIGHT BRIGADE by KAMERON HURLEY.

    A book I hadn’t heard of before going over the Tor.com reviewers’ best books of 2019.

    Some years ago, if you’d have said “military sci-fi” my answer would have been, what? no!

    But this was fascinating! Mars and Earth are at war and Dietz has signed up to fight. He’s part of a team that is turned into particles of light and then beamed at lightspeed to wherever they’re ordered, sometimes Mars. But something keeps going wrong with his drops, he seems to be joining his team at different times and situations. And soon he learns the truth behind it all.

    It is an intense read. So much happens and the reader is trying to puzzle it out along with Dietz. I’ve seen a few reviews since that talked about this book being a new take on Starship Troopers, which I don’t know about as I’ve not seen the movie or read the book. So I’ve come into this as a reader who doesn’t really know much about more classic SF or military novels.

    But what I really liked about this book is the way she constructed her future world. Where there are no nations, just corporations. Where you are either citizens or not. And if not, you have no rights and privileges. You are a “ghoul”. Dietz is a one of these “ghouls”, once an inhabitant of São Paulo which has been wiped out by the Martians.

    What a read this is. It is brutal and bloody. It discusses politics and capitalism that, while set in a future society, rings so relevant and true to our current one. Loved it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The closest thing I've read that corresponds to this story is Slaughterhouse-Five or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death is a science fiction-infused anti-war novel by Kurt Vonnegut. It has a passing resemblance to Starship Troopers. This is no Starship troopers. The Light Brigade has a similar start but quickly vers off. This is a disjointed time travel novel. It's written as a narrative of one man's experience in a fake war against Mars. The fake war is a cover for a real war between corporations for the control of Earth. The novel is not linear. The events are told out of sequence, and the reader must keep track of them to make sense of the story.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This one was a bit confusing to me because of the time distortions, but I enjoyed what I understood. Grim but optimistic would be how I characterize this one. I want to give it more stars but I was confused in a lot of places, so yeah.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The protagonist is a young woman who enlists in the military after the Martians (human colonists) destroy her home city and kill her remaining family; earning citizenship, and thus access to health care and education, from the reigning corporation would be a nice side benefit. But the transmission technology they use has side effects, and as she starts coming unstuck in time she begins to suspect that the stories of the war they’ve told her are false. Obvious comparisons to The Forever War, with only humans and corporations as enemies; I liked it more than the other Hurley book I read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Recycles starship troopers into something more original and fun. I was left wanting to read it again to connect all the dots.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    If the book weren't so utterly dystopian and relentlessly grim and grimy, if the main character had even a furlough in a garden, then maybe all the elaborate and gut-felt effort of this thing might have made some sense. The few glimpses of beauty always come before it's destruction, so what is there to support the hope that drives Dietz?
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Dietz is new recruit in the Tene-Sylvia corporate forces, having enlisted to fight the Martians after everyone they know has been killed in the Blink, presumed to have been committed by the Martians, which wiped out much of São Paolo.Military forces have a new way of deploying their forces now. The soldiers are transformed into light, and rematerialize at their destination. Which is fine, until Dietz starts experiencing drops that are very different from the rest of the squad, and witnessing and participating in a very different war.Is Dietz crazy? Is Dietz traveling in time? Is Dietz crossing timelines?Can Dietz do something about the war?Dietz isn't the only soldier having "bad drops," and the others are experiencing different wars not only from their squadmates, but also from Dietz and from each other. They gradually learn the brass know about them, and that their fellow soldiers call them "The Light Brigade." They're each trying to understand what's going on, what the war is really about, and whether there's any way to survive it.Every generation of sf readers has had its Starship Troopers, my favorites being the first (1959), The Forever War (1974), and Old Man's War (2005). (There are others, but they had less impact--on me, and, I think, overall.) This is another memorable one, and like the other memorable ones, it's very different from each of the others in its view of war, the military, the world, and small-p politics. They're all about a young soldier getting educated about all of the above, and making decisions about what this means to them, and what to do about it.I think this might become my favorite example of the type. Highly recommended.I received this book as part of the Hugo Voters packet,and am reviewing it voluntarily.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A military science fiction story about a war between Earth and Mars. The story follows a soldier who gets sent into battles through breaking into light particles to be sent instantly, but each time this person gets sent to a different part of their life. It is an amazing idea that is executing very well. The war plot line is great, with its own mysteries. The writing and main character are fantastically written. The story is gripping and enjoyable the whole way through.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    At a certain point I'm going to have to try Hurley's fantasy because, so far, her SF hasn't really moved me. This is considering that her essay on why she felt the need to write this novel impressed me rather more than the novel actually did. Perhaps it simply boils down to corporate armies in a dystopian scenario mixed with time displacement being a combination that simply didn't agree with me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is one of those books that I read about on John Scalzi's blog. Every month Scalzi opens up his blog to several writers so they can talk about their Big Idea; I've found quite a few good and new to me writers this way. Kameron Hurley's Big Idea about this book started with stories her family told about war. She had also done research on the African National Congress's recruitment of women fighters using propaganda. Then she took an idea about teleportation using light to convey soldiers to far away (sometimes even off Earth) battlefield's. It's a complex story but pretty fascinating.The protagonist is known as Bad Luck Dietz from the first teleportation event that went badly. Not all the teleportations are problematic but enough are that Dietz is perpetually confused about what is happening. Sometimes Dietz can't remember the mission and sometimes the mission is different from the one other soldiers experienced. Eventually Dietz realizes that sometimes the teleportation acts as an agent for time travel. As time goes along Dietz starts to want to change the outcome of the war by making use of this time travel. Because one thing Dietz knows is that the soldiers are pawns of the corporations in charge and the corporations do not really care about the ordinary citizen.It's a well told story although it was pretty disjointed at first; but that's what Dietz was experiencing as well so that's valid. There is also a great message about the futility of war. However, there is an optimist message as well. This is what Hurley said in her Big Idea post "In truth this book is less about predicting the future because so many aspects of this future are already here. Instead, it challenges us to rethink our present, and everything that comes after it. What is the future we want to build? How are we going to get there? Because everything is constructed. We can teach ourselves to create any type of future we want. But first we need to understand how much of the present is simply social conditioning. "
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The Light BrigadeAuthor: Kameron HurleyPublisher: Saga PressPublishing Date: 2019Pgs: 356Dewey: F HURDisposition: Irving Public Library - South Campus - Irving, TX_________________________________________________REVIEW MAY CONTAIN SPOILERSSummary:The Light Brigade. They dissemble soldiers into light and flash them to battlefields from Earth to Mars and the Asteroids. Grunts in the corporation armies. The Light Brigade are those who come back...different. They seem to have seen things that other soldiers don’t. Everyone is changed by being broken down. But the Light Brigade...are more different. The soldiers who survive learn to stick to the mission brief. If you come back too different, the corporation will disappear you...for special assignment. But no one ever comes back from special assignment. Memory, mission brief, flash into light and back. Who are you? Who are they? Why do you remember things differently? Light._________________________________________________Genre:Space OperaScience FictionMilitariaTime TravelWhy this book:Corporate citizenship, the Moon, a city in South America...I wonder how deeply we’re gonna get in Frank Herbert’s pocket. Don’t get me wrong. I love Herbert. Hence, me picking up this book._________________________________________________Favorite Scene / Quote/Concept:“They’re making us into superheroes.” Since Deadpool, that line is trucked with foreboding.Paragraph/Line of the Year Nominee:Hmm Moments:After a firm grounding in Herbert for worldbuilding, the story leaps. Is he an experimental subject? Is that happening to everyone? Is he falling between membranes of the multiverse when he transitions into light? So, when a book takes a classic as a referent, and is both self-referential and directly referential to how like the other author’s work it is...which wall does that break?WTF Moments:This has crossed out of time travel paradox and into time travel clusterfuck. Not saying it’s a bad story, but it’s a 3 Tylenol Gordian Knot.Wisdom:War is about the annihillation of the truth. Juxtaposition:The Light Brigade is a commentary on the relationship between the working class and the ruling class. The Unexpected:Time travel...how could Tanaka be there with the original squad and, then, introduced to Dietz at a later date? This left me thinking of the Lathe of Heaven from Le Guin._________________________________________________Last Page Sound:So...either the goal wasn’t the goal...or??? Lotta pages for an ending that isn’t. Not in the “oh wait for the sequel” sense, more in the Stargate: Universe sense.Author Assessment:I loved God of War so much that this author is getting read more[period]._________________________________________________
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    it's about a brutal endless war waged by corporate entities obsessed with taking over an earth already half destroyed. relentless environmental disasters had caused the massive displacement of peoples and the end of governments. as everyone became expendable refugees, corporations abandoned any responsibility as unacceptable 'socialism' in favour of a new set of class lines: there were citizens and then there were 'ghouls', displaced refugees and their descendents who had no rights at all. not that joining the military automatically conferred rights either, but to the soldiers it demonstrated their patriotism, in the hope that it might be rewarded over time. except that time itself, for some, became a problem: some were transported into the field of war into different times resulting, if their minds and bodies survived the shock of it, in an awareness of a state of forever war, a war that could not be won, and a foreknowledge of other details that nobody fighting on the ground was meant to know. i like Hurley a lot, both for her imagination and for her sharp and brutal writing style; this is a bit of a departure for her, and she doesn't always seem comfortable with her own work here, but it's an intricate and important sf novel well worth the read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Pros: brilliant world-building, interesting characters, challenging plot, thought provoking Cons: Dietz joins the Tene-Silvia Corporate Corps after the Blink wanting to be a hero, wanting to make the Martians pay. But military life is hard and the combat drops that break soldiers down into light molecules to transport them to mission locations… change some of them. Dietz doesn’t always land at the right location, or with the right people. Dietz’s jumps also reveal that the war isn’t what they’ve been told. Can one be a hero if no one knows what’s right anymore? This is an absolutely brilliant novel and I can understand why Hurley had such trouble writing it. There were times as a reader that I got confused as to when Dietz was in the timeline, I can only imagine how difficult it was as the author keeping who knew what, when, straight. The world-building it top notch. This is a future where mega corporations rule and there are layers of citizenship. Dietz began life as a ghoul, living outside the corporation, living off of refuse, and gained residency status through their parents. But full citizenship requires service. Throughout the book you see how ingrained the idea of earning citizenship is held by full citizens, even those born into it who did nothing to earn their place. There’s a lot of thought provoking commentary here. The characters are great. I loved that the first person perspective cloaked Dietz’s gender (until the end, when you learn their first name), and that the protagonists all seem to be fairly fluid in their sexualities (or at least, fairly open about their partners). Dietz starts off as hot-headed, stubborn, and not the smartest in the group, but is forced to learn - and learn fast - when things get tough. It’s a brilliant fast paced novel that will keep you on your toes.