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First Contact (In Her Name: The Last War, Book 1) [Kindle Edition]

Michael R. Hicks
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (256 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Young Midshipman Ichiro Sato joined the Terran Navy to escape a tyrannical father and find freedom among the stars. He had no idea when he boarded the survey starship Aurora for his first assignment that he and his crew would make humanity’s first contact with a sentient alien species. In an uncharted star system where Aurora’s crew discovers two planets inhabited by a non-human civilization, Aurora is disabled by gigantic alien starships before she can escape. Boarded by nightmarish blue-skinned warriors with claws and fangs, the aliens learn all there is to know about the ship, including all its stored information about humanity, before the crew is slaughtered in a series of ritual combats. Ichiro, the sole survivor, is returned to Earth as a messenger to warn of the aliens’ coming invasion of human space.

For that is the Way of the Kreelan Empire, an ancient and dying race that has waged war across the galaxy for a hundred thousand years, slaughtering every sentient species it has encountered in a desperate search for the One, a savior foretold in an ages-old prophecy who can rescue them from looming extinction. For the Kreelans, who will die out in a handful of generations, the conflict with humanity will be The Last War.

With Earth leading a fragile coalition of military forces to mount a defense against what many believe is nothing more than a hoax, Ichiro again finds himself at the sharp end of the spear aboard a Terran destroyer. Together with journalist Stephanie Guillaume, Legionnaire Roland Mills, and the irrepressible General James Sparks, Ichiro and the other men and women of the coalition put their lives on the line against an enemy none of them could ever have imagined.


The IN HER NAME Series:

THE LAST WAR Trilogy
- First Contact (Book 1)
- Legend Of The Sword (Book 2)
- Dead Soul (Book 3)

REDEMPTION Trilogy
- Empire (Book 1)
- Confederation (Book 2)
- Final Battle (Book 3)

THE FIRST EMPRESS Trilogy
- From Chaos Born (Book 1)
- Forged In Flame (2013)
- Mistress Of The Ages (2013)

Techno-Thrillers:

HARVEST Trilogy
- Season Of The Harvest (Book 1)
- Bitter Harvest (Book 2, June 2012)
- Reaping The Harvest (2013)


Product Details

  • File Size: 663 KB
  • Print Length: 373 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0692005862
  • Publisher: Imperial Guard Publishing (August 29, 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004IPQE0I
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,942 Free in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Free in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

This was the first book that I read of the series, and I'm hooked. HistoryGuy  |  54 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Well written prequel April 1, 2010
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I disagree with a previous reviewer in that I found the battle scenes were handled way better than in the first book. I also like the way the characters were developed - in the first book, some of the characters had an almost ad hoc nature to them, as though they were added for complexity rather than as an aid to the storyline.

One thing I thought fell flat though, was the bit about the reproduction of the Kreelans. Males were seldom mentioned in the first book and never seen (one got the feeling that they didn't exist anymore), yet in First Contact, they not only exist, but also keep the population alive and growing. My feeling, after having read the first book, would be to have had a Brave New World type approach to reproduction.

In this book the reader feels an empathy with the humans, in the first book, I definitely had more empathy towards the Kreelans.

As advice to someone wanting to purchase this book, I would definitely read In Her Name (Omnibus Edition) before First Contact. You then have a better understanding of the Kreelan philosophy towards life and living and, of course, why Tesh-Dar is what she is.

As has been mentioned, once you start reading this book, it *is* very difficult to put it down.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Prequel Done right August 12, 2011
By Sean
Format:Kindle Edition
By about 2/3 of the way through First Contact it had replaced Confederation as my favorite of the In Her Name books, granted this might change with Legend of the Sword but this is where I stand now. The book still feels like it is part of Hicks world but it also feels very different from the original Trilogy. Where as those books had a very Star Wars feel by the end First Contact felt more like Warhammer 40,000, which isn't a bad thing for a story that is more out right military Sci-Fi.

I really enjoyed the new characters that were brought into the mix and how detailed that battle got which is something that I felt was lost from the massive scale that was the first trilogy. While it took me a little while to get going on First Contact once I did I couldn't put the book down and was up till almost 3:30 last night finishing it off.

Like a good prequel it sets up the story for what is to come while building off of it, and not trampling on what made the original good, or filling the pages with massive retcons. Though knowing that this was written long after the First group of books, you can feel the tech seem to increase exponentially, due to one being written in the 90s and the other the 2000s, kind of like the Original Star Trek and Enterprise, but it wasn't horrifically distracting.

Can't wait to see where this trilogy goes with Legend of the Sword and then Dead Soul in the fall.
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29 of 40 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Huge Disappointment - 2.5 stars February 16, 2010
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I recently read the In Her Name trilogy and thoroughly enjoyed it. It has just about everything that I enjoy in a good, epic space opera yarn. I even put it on one of my Listmania lists as a recommendation. When I finished and saw that there was a prequel, First Contact, also available I quickly bought it and started reading. I was really interested to see how it all started. So I was shocked when the book didn't measure up in any way to the trilogy. I kept thinking it was like someone else had written this book.

The writing was often convoluted, making frequent (extreme) use of asides set apart by dashes in the middle of sentences. While that can be the correct way to do things, the overuse (and sometimes misuse) was driving me batty. There are simply better ways to write. A similar thing was often done with dialogue, mixing up character action in the middle of what they are saying. Such things are not wrong to do, but should be done judiciously. In First Contact the frequency detracted from reading, and often confused things.

There were many sections of the book that got so tied up in explaining military or technical detail that I ended up just skimming several paragraphs or pages. I enjoy military SF, but the reader shouldn't be bogged down in minutiae, the story needs to keep flowing. There were also a couple places where things like the internet and blogging were mentioned. Hello? The story takes place something like four to five centuries from now.

The upshot is that I was very bored reading the first two-thirds to three-fourths of First Contact. While I raced through the In Her Name trilogy and could hardly put it down I had to force myself to finish First Contact. (To give an idea of how much I struggled with it, it took me as long to read First Contact as it took me to read the entire trilogy.) I did want to know what happened, it's just that finding out wasn't a very enjoyable experience.

I will say that most of the problems almost disappeared in the last part of the book. The writing was smoother, the pacing better, and the characters more involved and interesting. The last part of the book was reminiscent of my experience reading the trilogy and I actually did enjoy it and was glad that I had at least stuck with it. But if I had to do it all again I would not buy and read First Contact. It seems to me that maybe Hicks rushed to publish it and it didn't go through as much editing (and probably outside critiquing) as In Her Name, and the book seriously suffered for it.

I'm giving First Contact 2.5 stars because it's not nearly as bad as some books I've read that I rated as 2 stars, but it's also below average and thus doesn't earn 3 stars.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT BOOK! I'm hooked on the series!
I recently read the Harvest series by this author. Since I'm anxiously waiting for the next installment decided to check out another of his works....WOW! Read more
Published 4 days ago by Laura Lee Watson
4.0 out of 5 stars First Contact
This story kept me hooked. Interesting characters, a gripping plot, and a plausible look at the future of inter-stellar warfare combined for great story. Read more
Published 5 days ago by Ozwald
4.0 out of 5 stars First introduction to this author is promising
While the "humans encounter intelligent life for the first time and finds it hostile" is a regular theme, the twist on the quality of those encountered in this novel easily... Read more
Published 5 days ago by Ardeet
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read
Really enjoyed the book, great storyline and good characters, will be getting the rest of them, thankfully this is simple to do.
Published 6 days ago by Michael
5.0 out of 5 stars HUMANITY'S FIRST CONTACT
Not having read any of the previous series, I started with Final Contact--and was NOT disappointed.

Humanity has seeded the star systems and have yet to meet another... Read more
Published 7 days ago by Yoli Washington
5.0 out of 5 stars great read
I loved it, a great read with a blend of fantasy and sci-fi. The first empress give a good background to the Kreelan Empire
Published 9 days ago by james bonner
3.0 out of 5 stars Don't start with this one!
I am a big sci-fi fan. I started with Isaac Asimov and Star Wars when I was only 13 years old, so I think I definitely I like space-operas. Read more
Published 9 days ago by Hajnalka Cheek
5.0 out of 5 stars Great author and story
I really enjoyed the book and the author's world he has created. I like the action and detail that is in the story and loved the character development. Read more
Published 9 days ago by me
5.0 out of 5 stars Could not put it down!
I had purchased Empire - In her name, but found out there was a trilogy that started before that one, so purchased First Contact.. Read more
Published 12 days ago by jarhead
4.0 out of 5 stars Try it - you'll like it
I read this book after finishing this Author's "Harvest" books. Frustrated that the third Harvest book hasn't yet been written, I wanted to try something else by the Hicks, so I... Read more
Published 12 days ago by Reader Downunder
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More About the Author

Born in 1963, Michael Hicks grew up in the age of the Apollo program and spent his youth glued to the television watching the original Star Trek series and other science fiction movies, which continue to be a source of entertainment and inspiration. Having spent the majority of his life as a voracious reader, he has been heavily influenced by writers ranging from Robert Heinlein to Jerry Pournelle and Larry Niven, and David Weber to S.M. Stirling. Now living in Florida with his beautiful wife, two wonderful stepsons and two mischievous Siberian cats, he lives his dream of writing full-time and spends as much time on the road in the family RV as possible...when he's not at the beach!

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