Takeover: Galaxy's Edge Book Review by Jason Anspach and Nick Cole

Takeover brings us back to where it all began, the dusty world of Kublar. Except now, after Chhun’s victory over Goth Sullus on Utopion, everything is different. In the years since the Battle of Kublar, the Kublarens have been integrated into the galactic economy, built up glittering cities, and even acquired a Zhee refugee problem. All of this was sponsored and shepherded by the Republic. There is just the little problem that the Republic doesn’t exist anymore.

TAKEOVER: GALAXY’S EDGE: SEASON TWO BOOK ONE BY JASON ANSPACH AND NICK COLE  KINDLE EDITION TO BE RELEASED JULY 28TH, 2020 BY GALAXY'S EDGECOVER ART FOR TAKEOVER BY TOMMASO RENIERI

TAKEOVER: GALAXY’S EDGE: SEASON TWO BOOK ONE BY JASON ANSPACH AND NICK COLE KINDLE EDITION TO BE RELEASED JULY 28TH, 2020 BY GALAXY'S EDGE

COVER ART FOR TAKEOVER BY TOMMASO RENIERI


BY TOMCHEN1989 - OWN WORK, CC0, HTTPS://COMMONS.WIKIMEDIA.ORG/W/INDEX.PHP?CURID=32046344

BY TOMCHEN1989 - OWN WORK, CC0, HTTPS://COMMONS.WIKIMEDIA.ORG/W/INDEX.PHP?CURID=32046344

The Chinese word for crisis isn’t actually comprised of danger and opportunity, but it makes for a good story. Breaking up the Republic means that ambition plus good luck can make you a king in some out-of-the-way corner of the galaxy. Unfortunately, lots of other people have the same idea, so potential potentates need rough men with guns to guard them while they sleep.

Which makes for interesting times on Kublar. The power vacuum created by the fall of the Republic allows men of wealth and power to set up personal fiefdoms in the quest for more power, and more money. Which is where our two POV characters, Carter and Bowie, come in.

Carter is an ex-legionnaire, hired out to the highest bidder in a desperate attempt to keep his marriage together and his kids in a good school. The money is good, but working for shady characters in far-flung places puts even more strain on family life than a regular deployment does. At least when you work for the government, everyone can pretend what you are doing is legit.

In our world, the forever war in Iraq and Afghanistan produced lots of guys just like Carter. Their primary skills are in killing people and breaking stuff, and if they are really honest with themselves, they kinda miss being deployed, even though it is hell on your marriage, and you miss all the stuff your kids are doing.

Bowie, on the other hand, strikes me as much less of a team player than Carter. While Bowie has useful skills, he is just a little too focused on looking out for # 1. You want him on your side, but not necessarily on your team. Which is probably just fine with him.

I can’t think of any real-world analogues of Bowie, but he did strike me as being a bit like Agent 47.

HITMAN: SNIPER CHALLENGEBY PATRICKBROWN

HITMAN: SNIPER CHALLENGE

BY PATRICKBROWN

While Kublar seemed a lot like Afghanistan in Legionnaire, this doesn’t really seem like the model in Takeover. Excepting their strategic rock deposits, there isn’t actually much economic opportunity in Afghanistan today. Nobody other than the locals is much interested in fighting over it. What Kublar reminds me most of is China around the turn of the twentieth century.

This is also known as the Warlord Era. After the fall of the Qing dynasty, and a failed attempt to unify China as a Republic under Yuan Shikai. There was danger and opportunity aplenty, with intrigue, battles, fortunes made and lost as China rapidly modernized after the sclerotic Qing dynasty was overthrown. This is the China of the opening scenes of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, a brief period where anything could happen, and foreign influences mingled freely with local tradition.

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But Carter and Bowie are just the muscle. All of the action on Kublar swirls around the mysterious Big Nee. Nilo is the man with a plan. His plan is going to set the world on fire. Just who Nilo is, and what he wants, is something gradually revealed through Takeover. I was pleased to see how Anspach and Cole had set us up for this, including little things that looked like filler content to flesh out a scene, but in fact turned out to be hints. This is the kind of thing that keeps me coming back to the Galaxy’s Edge series: attention to detail plus a keen sense for what is fun to read.

At Galaxy’s Edge, what you see is never what you get. There is always something hidden under the surface, biding its time to suddenly appear and change everything. By the end, we finally get a glimpse of exactly why and how Subiyook City came to be the hot place to make your fortune on the rim. The Galactic Republic, when it still existed, had selected Kublar as ripe for development. However, this was not just grift as usual for the Republic. Kublar holds a secret, one connected to the Koobs’ brave defiance of invaders who came from deep in the blackness of space.

Thus, Takeover manages to recapitulate the sweep of the first nine volumes of Galaxy’s Edge, proceeding from something that looks like the grunt’s view of war into galactic politics, and finally residing in a strange place where technology and magic are no longer distinguishable, but are somehow the pivot upon which the whole galaxy turns.

I was lucky enough to pick up Takover as a serial on GalaxysEdge.us in ebook format, a time limited experiment. The ebook will be available on Amazon July 28th. If you just gotta have it now, the audiobook version is available through Audible right now.

My other book reviews | Reading Log

Galaxy’s Edge season 1:
Legionnaire: Galaxy's Edge #1 Book Review
Galactic Outlaws: Galaxy's Edge #2 Book Review
Kill Team: Galaxy's Edge #3 Book Review
Attack of Shadows: Galaxy's Edge #4 Book Review
Sword of the Legion: Galaxy's Edge #5 Book Review
Tin Man: Galaxy's Edge Book Review
Prisoners of Darkness: Galaxy's Edge #6 Book Review
Imperator: Galaxy's Edge Book Review
Turning Point: Galaxy's Edge #7 Book Review
Message for the Dead: Galaxy's Edge #8 Book Review
Retribution: Galaxy’s Edge #9 Book Review

Tyrus Rechs: Contracts & Terminations:
Requiem for Medusa: Tyrus Rechs: Contracts & Terminations Book 1 Review

Takeover
Takeover: Part 1 Book Review
Takeover: Part 2 Book Review
Takeover: Part 3 Book Review
Takeover: Part 4 Book Review

Order of the Centurion
Order of the Centurion #1 Book Review
Iron Wolves: Order of the Centurion #2 Book Review
Stryker’s War: Order of the Centurion #3 Book Review
Through the Nether: Order of the Centurion #4 Book Review
The Reservist: Order of the Centurion #5 Book Review

Savage Wars
Savage Wars Book #1 Book Review