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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars First of a fairly good trilogy
This is the first of a series of three space adventures, each of which can be read on its own or together as a trilogy. The very unusual thing about this trilogy is that each of the three books falls into a slightly different genre

The full series is

The Disinherited (Space Opera & first contact)
Legacy (Time Travel)
Debt of Ages...
Published on December 21, 2006 by Marshall Lord

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A quick read, somewhat unsatisfying
I had fun reading this book as it moved along a decent pace( nothing I hate worse than authors that pour in more detail than story). However, this "story" lacked a lead character that the reader felt strongly about. The concepts, like the single origin for both the Terrans and Raehanivs was a neat subplot that was sort of glossed over. I wished the author...
Published on November 8, 1999


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A quick read, somewhat unsatisfying, November 8, 1999
By A Customer
I had fun reading this book as it moved along a decent pace( nothing I hate worse than authors that pour in more detail than story). However, this "story" lacked a lead character that the reader felt strongly about. The concepts, like the single origin for both the Terrans and Raehanivs was a neat subplot that was sort of glossed over. I wished the author would've explored that angle more. The Korvassha were as nasty an enemy as any Niven or Pournelle had come up with. I kept expecting a counterattack but the book just ended. This book had enough going for it to have gone another 100 pages. Maybe there is a sequel?
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good plot, bland characters and ify writing., June 17, 1998
By A Customer
Steve White is the coathor of the Starfire series of Books, which i happen to love. Having read all of D. Webers current books (the other author of the Starfire books) I turned to the works of White to kill some time during summer break. It doesn't take long to realize that Weber is a far superior author. Steve White lacks the talent to make characters seem real...this book also lacked the furious pace so typical of Starfire , but not all is bad. This book has an interesting plot and I personally intend to read the seuquels just to figure out what the heck is the deal with humans from other worlds and other whatnot. If you like Weber, read this. If you can only read one book, skip it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars First of a fairly good trilogy, December 21, 2006
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This is the first of a series of three space adventures, each of which can be read on its own or together as a trilogy. The very unusual thing about this trilogy is that each of the three books falls into a slightly different genre

The full series is

The Disinherited (Space Opera & first contact)
Legacy (Time Travel)
Debt of Ages (Alternative History)

Steve White started out his writing career with the "Starfire" books which he co-authored with David Weber. Both writers then branched out on their own, and both developed enormously as a result: "The Disinherited" was the first published novel which Steve White wrote on his own. In my opinion it's not at all bad, but it isn't in the same league as some of his more recent work.

"The Disinherited" was written a couple of years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and assumes that in the following two generations America, and the rest of the world has gradually begun to succumb to an extreme form of political correctness combined with sophisticated antisemitism.

Perhaps White slightly overdoes the stupidity of his villains here: the "Social Justice Party" which is expected to win the next US elections has policies such as to guarantee every citizen an above-average income. (Duh!) They also plan to shut down the international space project to terraform Mars and send all its personnel to re-education camps.

Then one of the spaceships working on that project is contacted by visitors from another star. The good news is that these visitors, the Raehaniv, are friendly: the bad news is that their home world is about to be attacked by a species called the Korvaasha, who are not.

The Korvaasha have a huge and very powerful empire, and intend to conquer the entire universe: just as the Social Justice party are cartoonishly incompetent politicians, the Korvasha are a cartoonishly horrible alien threat.

Rather than face a re-education camp back home and sitting around waiting for Earth to be discovered and conquered by the Korvaasha, some of Earth's astronauts decide to help take the battle to the Korvaasha - but in the process they become the Disinherited.

The story contains a lot of highly implausible elements, although some of them are explained towards the end of this book, and one or two more in the sequel, "Legacy."

Overall this is a fairly good book, worth a read if you like space opera.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Read like a Traveller campaign, September 13, 2003
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Mark J. Urbin (Westborough, MA USA) - See all my reviews
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I'm a fan of the Classic SF RPG Traveller. I'm betting that the author is a Traveller fan too. There were just too many concepts and items straight from the game. Tailored Vac Suits, Battle Dress, Stutterwarp (ok that's 2300, but close enough), and more.

This made the book more fun for me. Non-Traveller SF fans should like it as well.

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The Disinherited
The Disinherited by Steve White (Paperback - January 28, 1994)
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