Diplomacy, Budgets, and Blasters
At the beginning of War of Honor I was wondering if I should settle for the mediocrity of this series. Ten books in, this is the first one I was motivated to finish.
The appeal has never been the plot of any single book, but the long meta arc. Here Weber leans into a more Clausewitzian view, where diplomacy, economics, and domestic politics weigh as heavily as fleets in motion. Maybe it took the previous nine books of exposition, but now things are getting interesting! Post-war budget cuts become a plot point, a refreshing detail reminiscent of Truman, Eisenhower, and FDR biographies. The multiple points of view add texture, especially the poker game commanders play with limited information.
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