Title: The Lost Fleet: Dauntless Author: Jack Campbell Year: 2006 Publisher: Ace Reviewer Jake Beal I picked up "The Lost Fleet: Dauntless" on a whim, slightly put off by the claim on its front cover that it contained "the kind of hero Hornblower fans will love!" Still, I'd better have learned about not judging a book by its cover by now, and indeed, Mr. Campbell's work is better than its ominous praise would suggest. Why am I so suspicious of Hornblower comparisons? It's the curse of the two Davids, Feintuch and Weber, who can hardly take a step without being proclaimed the heirs of C.S. Forester. Perhaps it will taint my science fiction credentials, but I've greatly enjoyed Foresters work, and neither David's offering is anything like it. Except maybe that you have ships and harsh discipline, and (in Mr. Weber's case) the Napoleonic wars in space. I'll admit I enjoy Mr. Weber, and re-read his Honor Harrington stories often, but it's for the pablum feel-good heroic arc that he provides, a pale shade of the fascinating ups and downs of Mr. Midshipman Hornblower. About Mr. Feintuch, the less said the better. Returning to the subject at hand, Mr. Campbell has indeed created an interesting space hero, once you suspend disbelief about his universe's one big leap: in a century-long total war between space-faring powers, discipline and tactics have fallen into disrepair. As such, when our hero, Captain Geary, is recovered from his century of hibernation sleep, he's the only one who knows real space tactics any more. I have a hard time buying it, but for the purpose of the story, I'll let it be. Same with the fear, uncertainty, and doubt associated with 10 percent of light-speed time distortion. An author gets to have a couple of variances from the universe we live in, as long as they make them clear early on and live within the bounds they set. With these two, we get a very clear, feel-good setup for a plot-line. On the one hand, we have a reluctant hero who has to try to live up to an impossible reputation. On the other hand, we have a very low standard for him to leap over to start, and a clear path for escalation both of his skills and those of his enemies. As the subtitling makes clear, this is the first book of a series planned by Mr. Campbell, and I have to hand it to him for creating an interesting sand-box, and a nice thread for the reader to follow him into his world. I believe this is a first novel for him as well, and he thus gets extra points from me for avoiding all the easy pitfalls for new authors to fall into. If I sound less than effervescent about this book, it's because it's not an amazing new thing breaking new ground, etc, etc. It's a good, solid story, and it's an easy read, but it's a bit of a retread. I don't want to disparage Mr. Campbell, though: it's a good read, and made for a pleasant couple evenings. I'll probably pick up the next in his series as well, when it comes out this spring. But I'm not holding my breath in anticipation: it'll do well enough whenever it arrives.