*New York Times* best seller in hardcover. Armed forces veteran and seven-time New York Times best-selling author John Ringo delivers the third entry in his blockbuster Troy Rising SF series. Humanity fights back against a devastating Trojan-horse-like alien invasion of Earth and takes the fight to the stars by creating a vast battlestation as large as a planet.**
The third entry in the best-selling Troy Rising saga and follow-up to blockbuster Citadel from multiple New York Times and USA Today bestseller and military SF master, John Ringo.
When the orbital gates first materialized in the outer Solar System, all seemed well, but a devastating invasion ensued. Now humans have battled back from the conquest by a tyrannical alien species to become a force to reckon with in the galaxy. On a crash-building course, humanity has created a near-impregnable battlestation of Deathstar proportions to prove it. But the enemy is remorseless and to survive humans must take the fight to the heart of their empire and prevail–a feat no previous species has ever accomplished. Instead, the bones and burnt hulks of those who have tried litter the star-ways. But these galactic imperialists have never contended with humans, a foe who is their match in sheer ferocity and desire to win.
About the Troy Rising series: “[I]nfused with plenty of old-fashioned two-fisted can-do attitude . . .” – Publishers Weekly
About John Ringo: “[O]ne of the best...practitioners. . .of military SF.” – Publishers Weekly
"[F]ast-paced military SF peopled with three-dimensional characters and spiced with personal drama as well as tactical finesse" – Library Journal
“[Ringo’s work] “attains a terrible beauty not unlike that of the Norse Eddas...” – Publishers Weekly
"If Tom Clancy were writing SF, it would read much like John Ringo.” – Philadelphia Weekly Press
New York Times Best-Selling Author.
The Big Showdown with an Alien Empire, to Keep the Earth Free—and Maybe Free the Galaxy as Well.
The fight to free the Earth from alien domination began in Live Free or Die, and continued in Citadel. Now Tyler Vernon, and his troops aboard the gigantic battle station Troy, face a desperate battle with the forces of galactic tyranny. And the very survival of the Earth and its people is not all that is at stake. The galaxy itself must choose to live free or die—and if the tyrants win this battle, darkness will fall across the galaxy for millennia to come.
Description:
*New York Times* best seller in hardcover. Armed forces veteran and seven-time New York Times best-selling author John Ringo delivers the third entry in his blockbuster Troy Rising SF series. Humanity fights back against a devastating Trojan-horse-like alien invasion of Earth and takes the fight to the stars by creating a vast battlestation as large as a planet.**
The third entry in the best-selling Troy Rising saga and follow-up to blockbuster Citadel from multiple New York Times and USA Today bestseller and military SF master, John Ringo.
When the orbital gates first materialized in the outer Solar System, all seemed well, but a devastating invasion ensued. Now humans have battled back from the conquest by a tyrannical alien species to become a force to reckon with in the galaxy. On a crash-building course, humanity has created a near-impregnable battlestation of Deathstar proportions to prove it. But the enemy is remorseless and to survive humans must take the fight to the heart of their empire and prevail–a feat no previous species has ever accomplished. Instead, the bones and burnt hulks of those who have tried litter the star-ways. But these galactic imperialists have never contended with humans, a foe who is their match in sheer ferocity and desire to win.
About the Troy Rising series:
“[I]nfused with plenty of old-fashioned two-fisted can-do attitude . . .” – Publishers Weekly
“[I]rresistible action-sf . . .[filled with] Ringo’s amazingly fertile imagination.” – Booklist
About John Ringo:
“[O]ne of the best...practitioners. . .of military SF.” – Publishers Weekly
"[F]ast-paced military SF peopled with three-dimensional characters and spiced with personal drama as well as tactical finesse" – Library Journal
“[Ringo’s work] “attains a terrible beauty not unlike that of the Norse Eddas...” – Publishers Weekly
"If Tom Clancy were writing SF, it would read much like John Ringo.” – Philadelphia Weekly Press