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Starfist #9

Lazarus Rising

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It’s the 25th century, but the Marines are still looking for a few good men. . . . 

In their fiercest combat yet, the hard-charging Marines of 34th Fleet Initial Strike Team (FIST) have finally won their battle against a fullscale alien invasion of planet Kingdom. But as citizens try to return to some semblance of normalcy, the old government is replaced by a ruthless new regime.

Meanwhile, in a cave in some forgotten Kingdom backwater, several humans slowly regain consciousness. Their minds have been probed repeatedly . . . by whom and for what reason they cannot say, for they’ve been stripped of all memories of themselves and their past lives. These half-dead outcasts begin a journey into the unknown— in search of civilization, in search of themselves. And one survivor’s journey will take him to places of overwhelming danger, where his identity will be revealed—to the shock of all.

“Non-stop action . . . This is state-of-the-art military SF.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review)

368 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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About the author

David Sherman

67 books98 followers
David Sherman was the author or co-author of some three dozen books, most of which are about Marines in combat.
He wrote about US Marines in Vietnam (the Night Fighters series and three other novels), and the DemonTech series about Marines in a fantasy world. The 18th Race trilogy is military science fiction.
Other than military, he wrote a non-conventional vampire novel, The Hunt, and a mystery, Dead Man's Chest. He also released a collection of short fiction and non-fiction from early in his writing career, Sherman's Shorts; the Beginnings.
With Dan Cragg he wrote the popular Starfist series and its spin off series, Starfist: Force Recon—all about Marines in the Twenty-fifth Century.; and a Star Wars novel, Jedi Trial.
His books have been translated into Czech, Polish, German, and Japanese.
David passed away in November 2022.



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5 stars
240 (32%)
4 stars
274 (36%)
3 stars
190 (25%)
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39 (5%)
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7 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Freyja.
298 reviews
March 1, 2021
This is a well-paced novel with plenty of action. There are battles, intrigue, romance, and even a coup. You won't be bored.

I knew some nasty Skinks couldn't keep Gunny Bass down!
Profile Image for Per Gunnar.
1,291 reviews73 followers
April 3, 2013
This book in the Starfist series is a bit different from the rest that I have read so far in that it does not really involve an official deployment of the 34th FIST. Not even a small detachment of marines. Instead it tells a story that plays out on the Kingdom planet after the aliens have been forced to retreat from the planet and the 34th FIST have left to deal with their losses. Okay, slight spoiler, at least one of the marine manages to get himself involved in the story but not really in any official capacity.

I have to say that I was a bit suspicious of this book since I am generally not too keen about these “aftermath” stories but again, David Sherman & Dan Cragg managed to produce a well written book that was fun enough to read that I enjoyed it all the way. Okay, it is not one of my favorite one in the series but given the subject for the story it did surprisingly well for me.

For obvious reasons this book do not contain any of the major fighting and military campaigns, with the exception of a little bit at the end, that the other books have contained. It is more focused on character interaction and basic survival on one hand and Dominic de Tomas deprived regime on the other. No sooner than de Tomas have overturned the fanatic religious regime of Kingdom he installs his Socialist Party of Kingdom. Great, treading one evil for another one. Actually, there are not that much actual socialism in the way this guy “manages” his planet. It is more like the authors needed an evil tag to put on this nutjob and picked socialism. In any case, everything goes to hell of course and the good guys have to sort it out.

One part of the book which plays itself out in a prison is damned hard to read. Not because it is badly written but because all the prisoners are referred to by number only. Heck, I have enough difficulties remembering names! No way I can remember who was prisoner 9368 and how was 9004 and so on. I had to do quite a bit of flipping back and forth in those chapters.

In the last few pages of the book we actually get back to the 34th FIST which was quite fun. A few people pull some, not so few, strings to get their combat losses replaced. There are also a bit of a reunion happening and if you cannot figure out what that is about after having read the previous book and the fairly obvious book blurb, well, I am not going to tell you. Buy and read the book!
Profile Image for Scott James.
Author 12 books38 followers
October 29, 2012
In my review for book 7 of this series, I mentioned that I'd had just about enough of the formula, and was ready for something different. Book 9 does not offer that, but it does break from the formula for a while and revisit some characters not seen for a while.

Mind you, the villains are dumber than ever, and so over-the-top I'm wondering if the original authors are still on the series, rather than just their names.

There are four more books in this series that I'm aware of, and I've more or less come too far to give up on it now. But readers made of less stern stuff than I would do well to consider their other reading options before continuing on. I'm definitely taking a break for a while.
Profile Image for Jim.
1,205 reviews50 followers
January 17, 2016
About half-way through the book and I can say this is the worst book of the 9 I've read so far. Spoiler Alert!

If you haven't figured that Charlie Bass is still alive then you probably should stop reading the books. Yes, he's alive but the writing about what he's doing is just stupid! I really hope it gets much better.

Didn't get any better. What a stupid story. So this Marine Gunnery Sgt gets his memory back and goes to help the only 4-Star General on this entire planet to overthrow the evil despot! Sounds like some 10 year wrote the whole book!

I hope the next few books are much, much better or I'll find something to read!
Profile Image for Keira F. Adams.
435 reviews7 followers
March 25, 2016
Meh. Nascent Space Nazi meets space marine. Hijinks ensue. Entertaining if forgettable.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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