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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bolo!
Story 1: Miles To Go

Bolos are kin to self-aware, indestructible, giant tanks. Human creators granted them the initiative of a rock and a literal-mindedness which, coupled with multiple layers of override programming, had made them totally dependent upon humans for directions. A rogue Bolo is, of course, worse than any possible nightmare. The Dinochrome...
Published on January 3, 2005 by Detra Fitch

versus
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Only 1 orginal story in the bunch
I was rather disappointed in this book. All but ONE of the stories in this book are reprints!!! BOOO!

On the otherhand I will give David Weber a big hand for the first story in the book about the Bolo Nike. It was a wonderful tail.

On the whole i was rather disappointed with this book and the amazing disreguard for the reader.
Published on July 10, 2005 by Erik Weikum


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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bolo!, January 3, 2005
This review is from: Bolo! (Hardcover)
Story 1: Miles To Go

Bolos are kin to self-aware, indestructible, giant tanks. Human creators granted them the initiative of a rock and a literal-mindedness which, coupled with multiple layers of override programming, had made them totally dependent upon humans for directions. A rogue Bolo is, of course, worse than any possible nightmare. The Dinochrome Brigade had spent decades hunting down abandoned and obsolescent Bolos from the Mark XX to Mark XXIII series and burning out their command centers to prevent rogue (faulty) possibilities.

Captain Paul Merrit had once, on Sandlot, forgotten that a Bolo is a machine. But now he has a second chance. Merrit is sent to the planet called Santa Crus, "out in the middle of nowhere." Ursula Central has finally noticed a "sleeping" Bolo there. Merrit's duty is to locate the Bolo, inspect it, and assume command if it is still operational. The Bolo has been in Stand-By mode for close to eighty years. Central never realized that there has not been any real Navy personnel on the planet's base in all that time either.

However, Merrit locates the Bolo (nicknamed "Nike"). Nike is special in that he is more self-aware than any other Bolo. Nike is an experimental prototype that has emotions and keeps her high alertness even when not in battle mode.

The GalCorp company is run by Madam Osterwelt. She sends her only son, Gerald, to Santa Cruz to buy up land ... ALL land ... the entire planet. Yet to do so, Gerald must get rid of the three things that stand in the way: civilians, Merrit, and Nike. But Nike is having none of it!

Story 2: The Traitor

This is a short story. One Bolo is tracking down another Bolo that seems to have deserted during battle - something Bolos are supposed to be unable to do.

Story 3: With Your Shield

Lieutenant Maneka Trevor is sent to Fort Merrit on Santa Cruz for her first command (ever) of a Bolo, "Benjy". As Trevor learns from her team about strategy, she learns even more about her own human race from Benjy.

Story 4: A Time To Kill

The Final War saw the Concordiat of Man and the Melconian Empire end in fire and death. Humans and Melconians had finally wiped each other out. A hand full of survivors are all that is left of each race. The Humans settle on the planet where the last mission, Operation Ragnarok (the massacre of ALL Melconians on the planet) took place. Only the ruins of cities from decades ago and the husks of a few Bolos remain.

One Bolo, "Shiva", is slowly coming back on line. The timing could not have been better either. The last remaining Melconians, in dying ships, have no choice but to land and try to survive. Which race will win the right to live?

Story 5: A Brief Technical History Of The Bolo - From Bolos In Their Own Words

This is exactly what it sounds like. This section tells about each Bolo created. However, it is supposedly compiled AFTER "Story 4". The Bolos put together this section based upon the data it could piece together. Much information was lost after the "Longest Night".

**** The first story consumes half the novel space. It is also the best story in the collection. Though the Bolo series was created by author Keith Laumer, David Weber did an exemplarily job with this off-shoot. If you have never read any of the Bolo novels, you may find yourself rushing out to purchase them. This is very well done indeed. ****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Weber's Take on the Bolo, January 2, 2005
By 
AbleDogOne (South Carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bolo! (Hardcover)
The only reason I didn't give this book 5 stars is that David Weber was not the original creator of the Bolos about whom he writes; Keith Laumer did that. With that single caveat, I think he may have done the best of any non-Laumer writer to capure the original feel of the Laumer stories, with (of course) his own twist.

This is a collection of Weber's earlier Bolo fiction with a new short-story added. There are a total of four stories in the collection, plus a "Technical Essay" which is worth the price of admission all by itself. I'd call two of the stories -- "Miles to Go" and "A Time to Kill" -- novellas or short novels. The other two -- "The Traitor" and "With Your Shield" (the new piece) are short stories. Of the lot, my favorite is "The Traitor," followed by "Miles to Go," but all of them are EXCELLENT.

The essence of the Bolo stories has always been the bolo as the perfect knight. The creation of humanity whose courage and gallantry exceeds that of (almost) any human. In Weber's stories, that strand comes through perfectly, but he has also emphasized another aspect of Laumer's writing: the code of the individual, capable, gallant HUMAN. In my opinion, "The Traitor" best follows the pattern of the supremely gallant Bolo, while "With Your Shield" best sums up the relationship between Bolos and their human commanders.

I would unreservedly recommend any of these stories to any reader who has previously enjoyed Bolo fiction -- and perhaps even more especially to anyone who has not yet sampled Bolodom. The "Technical Essay" is also a treasure, since it does the one thing Laumer never did: codify the Bolos and establish a logical progression from model to model.

If you haven't read the older stories, you should definitely buy in hardcover. If you have the older ones, you might hold off until it comes out in paper (hey, you can borrow someone else's copy in the meantime!), unless you're one of those people like me who just like to have their favorite authors' books in hardcover.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mechanized Morality, June 28, 2006
By 
This review is from: Bolo! (Hardcover)
Bolo! (2005) is the second work in the Fourth Bolo Series, following The Road to Damascus. It is a collection of four stories about unusual Bolos. Of course, *all* the Bolo stories are about unusual actions by these machines; a sufficiently advanced artificial intelligence will necessarily have its own quirks and interpretations.

"Miles to Go" was initially published within Triumphant, Book 3 of the Second Bolo Series. This story relates the tale of XXIII/B-0075-NKE. Nike is a Bolo prototype stranded on Santa Cruz during the Quern Hegemony Wars. Major Marina Stravrakas, Nike's commander, was also Project Chief of the experimental psychotronics upgrade for Nike and spent the remainder of her life tweaking the Bolo's brainbox.

After Sector Command on Ursula rediscovers the deployment of Nike to Santa Cruz, Captain Paul Merrit is sent there as the Bolo's commander. He is amazed at the degree to which Major Stravrakas has enhanced the Bolo's capabilities. Then GalCorp sends a mercenary brigade to savage the residents of Santa Cruz so that they will sell their property to the company.

"The Traitor" was initially published within Last Stand, Book 4 of the Second Bolo Series. This story relates the tale of XXV/D-0098-ART in his pursuit of his crazed creche mate XXV/D-0103-LNC, who fled the Enemy in Morville and even fired on another Bolo. Lance was terribly wounded by the Enemy and is now fleeing toward the mountains, with Arthur in close pursuit. Of course, Lance has a reason for his flight.

"With Your Shield" is an original story, published for the first time in this volume. This story relates the tale of Lieutenant Maneka Trevor, freshly graduated from the Academy, on her first field assignment to the Thirty-Ninth Battalion on Santa Cruz. To her amazement, she is immediately assigned as the commander of the Bolo XXVIII/G-862-BNJ. Of course, Benjy is obsolescent and used only to train new commanders, but Maneka is awed by his combat record. Then the battalion is shipped to Chartres to oppose an Enemy invasion.

"A Time to Kill" was initially published within Last Stand. This story relates the tale of XXXIII/D-1097-SHV on Ishark. Shiva had been part of the XLIII Corps in the last battle of the Final War. He and his mates had killed every Melconian on the planet, every male, female or child, whether service or civilian. With the last shot, Shiva had died.

Now humans have settled on Ishark, calling it Ararat. They settle near the last battle site where the human transports landed, hoping that any active war machine will be human. Jackson Deveraux is out exploring the site when Shiva reactivates after almost seventy years of extensive repairs by its maintenance nanites. Shiva has reverted back to the creche state and is imprinted by Jackson as his commander upon first hearing his voice.

Shiva has been reactivated prematurely because Melconian battle comms have been detected in the system. A Melconian fleet has arrived in sorry condition; they cannot leave the planet. When humans are detected on the planet, the surface is scanned for power sources. Only a single fusion power plant is discovered; the Bolo operating on reserve power is overlooked. The Melconian commander sends his assault pods to destroy the human settlements.

The Epilog "A Brief Technical History of the Bolo" was initially published within The Triumphant. It contains "Bolo Marks and Year of Introduction", "A Brief Design History of the Bolo", and "Bolo Armament". This epilog is an excellent resource for future authors of Bolo stories.

This volume brings together prior Bolo stories by Weber in a hardback format. Moreover, the original story is a precursor for Old Soldiers, the third novel in the Fourth Series. Who could resist reading this book and maybe even buying a personal copy?

Highly recommended for Laumer, Weber and Bolo fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of high adventure and machines with moral character.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Only 1 orginal story in the bunch, July 10, 2005
This review is from: Bolo! (Hardcover)
I was rather disappointed in this book. All but ONE of the stories in this book are reprints!!! BOOO!

On the otherhand I will give David Weber a big hand for the first story in the book about the Bolo Nike. It was a wonderful tail.

On the whole i was rather disappointed with this book and the amazing disreguard for the reader.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bolo!, February 20, 2006
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This review is from: Bolo! (Hardcover)
Outstanding! David Weber again proves his abilities as a Bolo story teller. The four stories in this book entertain and honor the Dinachrome tradition, although I thought I had read one of them before. In addition, one of them sets the stage for his next novel, "Old Soldiers". The Bolo technical chronology at the end is a must for anyone wanting a comprehensive collection of Brigade History. For any of you that can't seem to satiate your need for Bolo lore, this is definately one to add to your collection.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Bolo, February 3, 2010
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This review is from: Bolo! (Mass Market Paperback)
I was never all that crazy about the Bolo stories that Keith Laumer created. But, Weber has carried them to a new level. I'm going to repeat what I said in one of my other Weber reviews ... I've been reading SciFi for ~55 years now and have had many favorite authors over the years. David Weber is my favorite SciFi author of all time, and as any SciFi fan knows, there are a LOT of authors to choose from. I can't remember an author with greater breadth; nor can I remember one with greater depth.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Hammer Slammer tanks meet Dahak, August 9, 2008
This review is from: Bolo! (Mass Market Paperback)
If I had to describe a Bolo, I'd have to say they are something akin to David Dranke' Hammer Slammers tanks put on steroids, meets a Dahak kind of machine of similar intelligence and equal personality.

Saw this book at a local Hastings and since Weber is one of my preferred authors, decided try it out. Though every book to date I've read that Weber has put together have been full novel length (currently reading By Schism Rent Asunder), this one didn't disappoint. It has piqued my interest in other Bolo books.
Of the four short stories that make this installment, all are separate while taking place in a time line to one another, I'd have to say the 4th one was my favorite. Compounded mistakes on both sides creates an almost primal hate that begets hate, eventually driving both sides into an insanity where neither will settle for anything less than the annihilation of the other. But after all is said and done...a smattering of survivors manage to come to terms.

I'm reminded a great deal of Dahak from the Mutineers Moon Trilogy in many respects. While Dahak is like a rock when it comes to upholding his own morals, Bolo! shows that even a sentient machine can succumb to same madness that begets humans in A Time To Kill. I'm not doing Bolo! any justice in my own words, but I highly recommend this read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Another great Bolo book!, January 3, 2008
This review is from: Bolo! (Mass Market Paperback)
David Weber has taken over the Bolo series, and as both a Weber fan and a huge Bolo fan, I couldn't be happier. The ONLY disappointing thing about this book is that it has a few stories that appear in other works, like BOLOS, BOOK 3 and BOLOS, BOOK 4. But even then, the new story is worth the price of admission. Bolo fans will want to add this to their collection. Not a Bolo fan? You will be after this book. Don't know what a bolo is? Pick up this book to find out.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Bolo!, May 12, 2007
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This review is from: Bolo! (Mass Market Paperback)
The only reason this got a 4 from me is because it was a repackaged collection of previous stories. They were all great 'nuts&bolts' science fiction - but with a heart.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mixed feelings, May 19, 2006
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This review is from: Bolo! (Mass Market Paperback)
I rated this book a four because while I loved the stories, 3/4 of them are reprints from earlier Bolo novels. This would be fine, if perhaps that had been stated on the back cover. (I bought the paperback. The hardcover may very well have stated it. I don't know.) It is shown in the copyright section inside the book. If you have Bolos Books 3 and 4, don't bother getting this, as the one new story is probably the weakest of the three. If you don't have those books, then by all means this is a great book.
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Bolo!
Bolo! by David Weber (Hardcover - January 4, 2005)
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