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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Turn For the Worse
Lazarus Rising (2003) is the ninth novel in the StarFIST series, following Kingdom's Fury. In the previous volume, the 34th FIST, reinforced by the 26th FIST, had driven the Skinks off Kingdom and followed them to Quagmire. There the Gundar Bay, their troopship, attacked a Skink warship and drove it away from the planet, leaving enemy soldiers on the planet. The 34th...
Published on January 20, 2004 by Arthur W. Jordin

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Decent followup to Book 8
LAZARUS RISING (12/2003) is the 9th book in the STARFIST series of 25th Century Military SciFi, covering the exploits of a galaxy-faring platoon of Space Marines.

This book follows book 8 - KINGDOM'S FURY - which was, hands down, the best entry from the series... and a hard act to follow. The space aliens have been defeated on Kingdom, but in the...
Published on May 24, 2008 by Stewart Teaze


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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Turn For the Worse, January 20, 2004
By 
Lazarus Rising (2003) is the ninth novel in the StarFIST series, following Kingdom's Fury. In the previous volume, the 34th FIST, reinforced by the 26th FIST, had driven the Skinks off Kingdom and followed them to Quagmire. There the Gundar Bay, their troopship, attacked a Skink warship and drove it away from the planet, leaving enemy soldiers on the planet. The 34th dropped on Quagmire and the Gundar Bay returned to Kingdom with the 26th FIST to preclude another assault there. The 34th, with a little help from the hexapod natives, crushed the Skink forces on Quagmire and the two FISTs returned to their bases.

Meanwhile, on Kingdom, Dominic de Tomas had charged the members of the Ecumenical Council with profiteering and treason, seized control of the government, and executed all the theocrats. On a worldwide broadcast, he declared the defeat of the Skinks and announced his actions against the Council. Then he promised to present a new constitution and called upon everybody to start rebuilding their lives. It was a short and effective speech.

In this novel, Kingdom refugees are straggling back to their homes, unsure whether the "demons" will return or not. Kingdom forces are still searching for the Skinks and sometimes finding them in vaguely seen animals and even humans. Lieutenant Ben Loman thinks he finds the demons and wipes out a group of primitive humans, with one exception. Later he thinks he finds Skinks in a remote village and attacks a group of settlers, but this time he loses a reconnaissance car and its crew.

One group of refugees awakes within an iron cage in a Skink compound, bearing signs of rough treatment on their bodies, but none are able to remember so much as their name. The six find food and clothing within the buildings and begin to remember some things about themselves. They scout around the area outside the compound and discover a trail and a stream. They cannot agree on which to follow, so they split into two parties and go off looking for other humans.

This story mostly concerns the growing power of Dominic de Tomas, who is apparently redesigning the Kingdom government on the model of the Third Reich. He quickly organizes a social structure that involves his political party in every aspect of civilian life and starts moving into the military forces. The Confederation ambassador, Jayben Spears, soon recognizes the growing authoritarian structure, but is unable to effectively oppose the changes.

Like Hitler, de Tomas proves to be a charismatic figure and quickly establishes himself as a beloved leader. He unleashes all the power of the governmental propaganda ministry, appealing mainly to the working classes. His own Special Group troops are fanatically loyal to him. The young intellectuals are against him, but their parents are not. The SG are picking up his opponents and the discontented and either imprisoning or executing them. His power is growing every day. Then one of the SG units picks up a young woman within a deserted village and the tide starts to turn.

Highly recommended for Sherman and Cragg fans and for anyone who enjoys tales of underground resistance groups within a total dictatorship.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of Series, September 24, 2005
The ninth book of the StarFIST has very little to do with the 34th StarFIST. Instead, it has much to do with the most celebrated marine of that unit, Gunnery Sergeant Charlie Bass. Two books ago he was ambushed while on patrol and presumed dead. Now he is back and his unit has left him behind on the planet of Kingdom. There are no credible threats from Skinks anymore but that is made up for by the threat from the bloodthirsty planetary government based on the worst of the Nazis. It's one very capable marine against a planet of neo-nazis. The bad guys are going to lose bigtime.

This is an exciting book with plenty of unexpected twists. I think it is the best of the series so far.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Decent followup to Book 8, May 24, 2008
By 
Stewart Teaze (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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LAZARUS RISING (12/2003) is the 9th book in the STARFIST series of 25th Century Military SciFi, covering the exploits of a galaxy-faring platoon of Space Marines.

This book follows book 8 - KINGDOM'S FURY - which was, hands down, the best entry from the series... and a hard act to follow. The space aliens have been defeated on Kingdom, but in the power-vacuum left after the Confederation Marines leave, a NAZI-like regime pops up to take power. The NAZI types, of course, are a loathsome bunch, and their wicked methods are described in detail.

The secondary sub-plot involves Gunnery Sgt. Bass's exploits (and his hokey "amnesia").

As is common in this series, there is a dearth of future sci-fi technology (no new tech is introduced in this book), and no aliens or future cultures are introduced. All in all, this is an average entry for the series... but still fun stuff.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Best book in the series yet, December 23, 2009
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Jake Nelson (New Jersey, USA) - See all my reviews
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This is the best novel in the series yet. The authors drop much of the military pomp and focus on a single character from the 34th FIST for nearly the entire book. You get some good character development and new and interesting supporting characters. Unlike the characters from the 34th who you are mostly sure will survive each new novel, the supporting characters from this book have no guarantee which makes for a very enjoyable read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars WoW!, July 10, 2009
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I just finished this one. I find the depth and complexity of the characters grabs me in every one of the Starfist books and will not let me go!
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4.0 out of 5 stars 4 Stars for fun!, August 7, 2008
Great book part of a great series. I've read them all and loved them.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fans of military science fiction will love this, December 2, 2003
It may be the twenty-fifth century but the Marines are still the first soldiers on planet fall. The planet kingdom of Yahweh and His Saints and Their Apostles call upon the confederates for help in crushing a peasant uprising the marines of the 34th Fleet Initial Strike Team answer the call. However, the military is shocked to discover they are fighting sentient aliens of rather than human beings. After a difficult war, the marines manage to wipe out the Skinks but they suffered heavy loses including Gunnery Sergeant Charlie Bass.

Back on Heaven, the military theocracy is overthrown and the newly formed government resembles Hitler's Nazi party as the new leader has modeled the government after the SS branch. In the backwoods of Heaven, six POW taken by the Skinks awaken with no memory of who or where they are. They wait until they come upon a village of religious settlers who take them in never dreaming this act will involve them and the POWs in a coup d'etat whose aim is the complete overthrow of the present regime.

Fans of military science fiction will want to read STARFIST LAZARUS RISING and then will seek out the previous books in this exciting series. Readers get a vivid picture in their minds of Heaven, a mix of medieval life and futuristic technology. David Sherman and Don Cragg are excellent collaborators who create heroes that are brave, resourceful and refreshingly original.

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great addition to the series, December 9, 2003
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Great read answers all the queries left from the last novel
I had to finish it in one sitting .
Next one please
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Isn't hardback supposed to be the sign of a good book?, December 10, 2003
By 
Craig (Puyallup, WA) - See all my reviews
To start out ive been a fan of StarFist for about two years. I have every book in the series so far and I have enjoyed everyone of them. i have been antisipating this book for quite awhile and id like to say it was worth the wait, but id be lying.
to start out, the description on the book sais lots of non-stop action. yet that is not true at all. usually in starfist there is quite a bit of action. but now there was so little i can count the times, 3, and they lasted maybe a half a page to a page out of the 305 or 6 page book.
really, the book is too long, what might have been a short 100 page paper back is drawn out into 300 sum pages. i thought about taking the book back since its a waste of 20 bucks, but i decided to keep it since i have the other 8.

the novel is also more of a love story than anything else between a marine, we all know who, and comfort brattle and colleen a fellow p.o.w. and the neo-nazi regime of kingdom isnt that bad at all. sigh..the say the least, get the book so you can have it for the collection, but id get the paperback version when that comes out. hopefully the next books and the runoof series of starfist:recon will be way better.

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Where's the beef?, March 14, 2005
I love this series and have read them from the beginning. This one, however, was something of a disappointment. The first 7/8 of the book consists of build-up to what can only be described as the anticlimactic climax! When you have a thoroughly evil villain doing all sorts of unspeakable things throughout the last 2 books, one hopes for something more of a comeuppance than "bang, he died."

The book is well written but, given that it's not Dostoevsky, could definitely have used more action and less plotline!
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Starfist: Lazarus Rising
Starfist: Lazarus Rising by David Sherman (Audio Cassette - December 2, 2003)
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