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The Zenda Vendetta

por Simon Hawke

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

Series: Time Wars {Hawke, Simon} (Book 4)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1644166,437 (3.54)3
The year was 1891, and Ruritania was a small, seemingly insignificant Balkan country that was about to crown a new king. But a conspiracy headed by his own half brother resulted in the would-be king being kidnapped and held in Zenda Castle, an impregnable medieval fortress. While two factions secretly battled for control in Ruritania, an even more dangerous conspiracy was launched from the far future; one that was about to make a tiny Balkan country the focal point for plot to change the course of history. Her name was Sophia Falco, codename: Falcon, a veteran crosstime field agent of the TIA. She was smart, beautiful, and absolutely deadly. She was also a terrorist, a member of the infamous Timekeepers who had submitted to cybernetic conditioning that created a false persona under which she had enlisted in the Temporal Army Corps, and from there, joined Temporal Intelligence, at which point her true personality was triggered and the woman who had once been Col. Moses Forrester's lover was reborn as his most lethal enemy. And the weapon she was going to use against him was the son he had abandoned in another time.The elite commando team of Lucas Priest, Andre Cross and Finn Delaney have another historical adjustment mission to perform: save the rightful king of Ruritania and stop the Timekeepers before they can bring about a temporal disaster. And to do so, their commander, Moses Forrester, must journey back into the past with them to destroy the woman he once loved ... and murder his own son.… (más)
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Still like the series, but Hawke's better at keeping relationships glib. I know the side plot was carried through, but it wasn't a part I liked much. Giving depth to shallow characters doesn't work often and his shallow characters are fine as they are.
( )
  Razinha | May 23, 2017 |
This review is written with a GPL 3.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at Bookstooge.booklikes.blogspot.wordpress.leafmarks.com & Bookstooge's Reviews on the Road Facebook Group by Bookstooge's Exalted Permission. Title: The Zenda Vendetta Series: Time Wars Author: Simon Hawke Rating: 3 of 5 Stars Genre: SFF Pages: 210 Synopsis: The Time Commando's head out to mop up the last of the time terrorists, who are hellbent on causing a time split and potentially ending the universe. However, the Commando's don't have all the info, as their commander has held back some very personal revelations. My Thoughts: First book where I hadn't read the original book this was based on. To be honest, I don't feel like I missed a thing and I also have no desire to search and read The Prisoner of Zenda. That rat Mongoose [how ironic] is finally killed for real. This was mainly about the head of the Time Commando's, Forrester and how his past actions are coming back to bite him, and everyone else in his timestream, in the butt. Passable action but not quite enough to take your attention away from the lack of characterization and overall b-list writing. Mediocre is the best word I can use to describe this. Good enough to keep reading for awhile but it does mean that if things don't change, that this series' death knell has tolled. " ( )
  BookstoogeLT | Dec 10, 2016 |
The 20th book I know I've read by Hawke.

The gang's back, this time with the direct involvement of their boss, Moses Forrester. It appears that Forrester did some 'naughty' stuff on his first mission, which resulted in a kid (don't worry; this comes up immediately in the book). The kid, who now looks about 30 but is actually 79, and an old flame of Forrester's decide on some payback. Oh, and they are the last members of TimeKeepers still around, so there's that as well.

As I mentioned in my last review, the TimeWars, at least up to then, and this book, does not relate to warring times or the like. But to one time that decides to settle their disputes by inserting members of 27th century military personal back in time. During conflicts. And 'judge' the results. I mention this issue because it's mentioned several times in this book. It's the purpose behind TimeKeepers. They are like Green Peace - in that Green Peace has been known to ram whaling boats to stop the people on the boats from whaling. Well, TimeKeepers fuck with time to try to show that fighting wars back in time is super stupid. As any sane person would know without having to have them involved (hell, the guy who invented the devices that allow time travel knew it, got insane over it, and killed himself over it).

So, in this specific instance, a specific person is about to be crowned king in some made up country in Central Europe in 1891. That country being a ‘vest pocket’ kingdom named ‘Ruritania’. Which is both a fictional country, and something that popped up in real, fiction, books way back when. The TimeKeepers, in the form of this really super hot chick, and Forrester’s son, are attempting to both disrupt this crowning moment, while also kill Andre Cross, Lucas Priest, and Finn Delaney. They’d like to get Forrester to, though he is desk bound now-a-days so that’s unlikely (ha, send him a letter, he’ll travel in time).

I’d mentioned before, in another review, that I liked how Hawke combined real world history with a science fiction/time travel story. Though I didn’t specifically like the ‘good guys’. Well, that mostly continues in this book. Mostly because the ‘bad guys’ side seems more reasonable than whatever weird thing the ‘good guys’ are fighting for. It’s vaguely annoying that I kind of entered this series a while back (as in the 1980s, 1990s) with this idea that the TimeWars people were working to protect time. To keep it from destabilizing. Annoying because, while that is true, for the most part they are making ‘adjustment’s that they wouldn’t have to be making if they weren’t fucking back in time to begin with. But, whatever.

I entered this book somewhat reluctantly because I knew, unlike past books, this one would be fiction set in . . . fiction. As in, instead of the story set against ‘stuff’ that really happened back in time, the story is set against. . well, the idea of something that could have happened back in time. Sure, Ruritania popped up in a set of books released in the late 1890s, but it’s still a fictional country. And sure, the last book by Hawke, the Pimpernel Plot one, involved a fictional character as the back story (from a play from something like 1905), but it still had as it’s backing the real French Revolution (hmm, and heh, I just learned that one of the main villains in that book, Chauvelin, actually is based on a real person who actually lived through the time and was an officer under Napoleon. Unlike how the book just tossed out something like ‘it doesn’t matter that he died, he was going to die in a year anyway’).

As happens, I distracted myself.

I was reluctant to begin this book because it seemed to be veering away from one of the things I liked about the series (time travels working and acting in a real world historical setting). But I did begin the book, and I found it actually quite entertaining. It was ‘good enough’. I’d give it around a 3.7 or 3.8 rating.

April 7 2016
( )
  Lexxi | Jun 26, 2016 |
The Prisoner of Zenda gets the Time Wars treatment for the fourth installment of the series. In this outing our now regular team of commandos need to travel to the Balkan nation of Ruritania in 1891 to thwart the last vestiges of the temporal terrorist group known as the Timekeepers. (This is the same group that was causing trouble in The Timekeeper Conspiracy.) What follows is a tale filled with action and intrigue. One where the temporal agents have to use their wits as well as their technology to save the day. It's a book I'm glad to have on my shelf.
--J. ( )
  Hamburgerclan | Mar 12, 2006 |
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Simon Hawkeautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Mattingly, David B.Artista de Cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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For Robert M. Powers with friendship and respect
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It was a room where time did not exist. (prologue)
As the train pulled out of the Dresden station in a cloud of steam and early morning mist, Rudolf Rassendyll sat in the dining car over a light breakfast, trying to recall where he had seen the scar-faced man before.
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The year was 1891, and Ruritania was a small, seemingly insignificant Balkan country that was about to crown a new king. But a conspiracy headed by his own half brother resulted in the would-be king being kidnapped and held in Zenda Castle, an impregnable medieval fortress. While two factions secretly battled for control in Ruritania, an even more dangerous conspiracy was launched from the far future; one that was about to make a tiny Balkan country the focal point for plot to change the course of history. Her name was Sophia Falco, codename: Falcon, a veteran crosstime field agent of the TIA. She was smart, beautiful, and absolutely deadly. She was also a terrorist, a member of the infamous Timekeepers who had submitted to cybernetic conditioning that created a false persona under which she had enlisted in the Temporal Army Corps, and from there, joined Temporal Intelligence, at which point her true personality was triggered and the woman who had once been Col. Moses Forrester's lover was reborn as his most lethal enemy. And the weapon she was going to use against him was the son he had abandoned in another time.The elite commando team of Lucas Priest, Andre Cross and Finn Delaney have another historical adjustment mission to perform: save the rightful king of Ruritania and stop the Timekeepers before they can bring about a temporal disaster. And to do so, their commander, Moses Forrester, must journey back into the past with them to destroy the woman he once loved ... and murder his own son.

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