Anvil of Stars by Greg Bear
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This book is the continuation of "Forge of God". Not getting too much into the plot, we see now that the benefactors and preservers of the Human race train children to get revenge, under some sort of alien law of some sort of organization or empire. This reminds me of the book "Ender's Game". Where children with special skills are trained to exterminate an alien race that in appearance wants to destroy humanity.
In Ender's game, the children commit xenocide as children. In Anvil of Stars, they are trained as children but are young adults; they actually grow up in their ship and create their own culture while being tutored by AI's, and as young adults apply the sentence of the law to the destroyers of humanity.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This book is the continuation of "Forge of God". Not getting too much into the plot, we see now that the benefactors and preservers of the Human race train children to get revenge, under some sort of alien law of some sort of organization or empire. This reminds me of the book "Ender's Game". Where children with special skills are trained to exterminate an alien race that in appearance wants to destroy humanity.
In Ender's game, the children commit xenocide as children. In Anvil of Stars, they are trained as children but are young adults; they actually grow up in their ship and create their own culture while being tutored by AI's, and as young adults apply the sentence of the law to the destroyers of humanity.
View all my reviews
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