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Paperback Shadow of the Scorpion: A Novel of the Polity Book

ISBN: 1597801399

ISBN13: 9781597801393

Shadow of the Scorpion: A Novel of the Polity

(Part of the Agent Cormac Series, Polity Universe (chronological) (#2) Series, and Polity - stand alone (#2) Series)

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Book Overview

A standalone prequel to Neal Asher's explosive Agent Cormac series, Shadow of the Scorpion shows that some secrets are too hard to bear . . . Following the human vs prador war, Ian Cormac signs up... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Another excellent novel from Asher

Shadow of the Scorpion is another stand alone novel from Night Shade Books (the first was Prador Moon), this time focusing on the early years of Ian Cormac, the ECS agent we all know from the Gridlinked sequence. Neal has taken a character that has gone through many experiences and gone back to the beginning, to see what made IanCormac what he is. The story is told against the backdrop of the end of the Prador war, still ongoing while he was a child and the aftermath to deal with during his ECS training. Cormac and his two squad mates are stationed on Hagren, a planet near the Graveyard of wrecked worlds from the Prador war. With a Prador dreadnought crashed on the surface they are given the job of routine sentry duty, a task that is considered both mundane and routine. That is until theseparatists try to sneak in and steal a deadly CTD, a bomb with devastating power. With surviving Prador aboard the dreadnought and the separatist threat, Cormac soon finds himself in a dangerous situation and an investigation into the separatist activities, one that leads him to discover just what he's capable of. During this narrative we are given flashbacks to Cormac's youth, the unusual appearance of a scorpion shaped war drone and the experiences his family go through. Why this drone turns up is a question thatCormac asks himself, and will reveal a secret that has been hidden for years. I will make no apology about being a huge fan of Neal's work, I love the way he can create believable and hugely enjoyable worlds and his story telling skills are second to none. When I found out that this book was to focus onCormac's earlier life, and that it was to be published by Night Shade Books, I got pretty excited. The excellent Prador Moon was the first collaboration between the two and my only real criticism was the fact that the story was a little on the short side. Of course, there are perfectly good reasons for this, but when I heard Shadow of the Scorpion was out from the same publisher I feared it may be the same situation. There was nothing to worry about though, this is a decent sized novel (although not quite as long as Neal's usual output) and thoroughly enjoyable. As I've not read all the Cormac novels that Neal has written I can't compare to them, but of the ones I have read (Gridlinked, Line of Polity), this measures up nicely. There are obvious differences between a raw recruit and that of a fully fledged ECS agent, but apart from that Shadow of the Scorpion does a great job introducing a likable and motivated character in Cormac. He's got strengths and weaknesses, but it's his determination and adaptability that shines through here. In fact, all the characters that we meet are very well presented, none come across as shallow or two dimensional and each contribute effectively to the story. As for the story itself, another winning combination of character development, aliens, action and political undertones. If you like Neal's other stuff then this i

Asher delivers yet again.

This is a pre-quell to Asher's Ian Cormac novels. The novel can stand alone yet describes the future Earth Central Security Agents formative years as a youngster growing up during the end of the horrendous Prador Wars through his development and growth as a soldier. The reader comes to understand just how Cormac subsequently transforms into a lethal calculating emotional iceburg in a swarm of conflict. Asher delivers yet again in his own style of relentless action, violence, and humor.

polity novel

Asher is one of my favorites and this is another polity fix for Asher fans. Explains how Cormac and shiruken came together. Fills in the gap at the end of the prador war.

Great!

Neal Asher is one of my favorite current Sci Fi authors. I can't put down any of his polity universe series. Go get Gridlinked if you haven't read it and then read the whole series.

superb

Neal Asher is becoming something of a phenomenon. The man never fails to deliver. This novel 'shadow of the scorpion' could be taken as a prequel to his entire polity universe, the description of Ian Cormac as a child,his first foray into combat with the sparkind and ECS, his first meeting with terrorists or as asher has it 'separatists' and what formed Cormac's life and morality. We meet Cormac's mother, brother and the memory of his heroic and yet tragic father. We discover that it is indeed possible for 'golem' or androids to engage in the sports of venus when it suits them. In it we meet some friends and characters both human and AI from the polity universe brought to life in all of his wonderful 'polity' novels. This being a prequel in no way diminishes any of the fun that Asher's fan's expect and that Asher does, indeed, deliver with a CTD of pure enjoyment. Good going, and I hope Asher never tires of writing these wonderful books.
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