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 On Basilisk Station

Commander Honor Harrington, a promising if unconventional up-and-coming
command officer in the Royal Manticoran Navy, arrives aboard her new
command - the outdated cruiser Fearless, whose armaments have been stripped
to make way for an experimental new weapon, the grav lance, which proves to
be effective in fleet exercises...but only until its first use, after which
the Fearless is pummeled in the fleet's wargames. As punishment,
Harrington, the Fearless, and her new crew are assigned to Basilisk Station
- a backwater customs inspection posting on the frontier of Manticore space
usually reserved for officers and ships fallen from favor. Worse yet, the
ship currently commanding the Basilisk Station operation is due for a
refit, leaving Fearless and her limited resources to cover an impossible
area of space. When Honor deploys her crew to cover all of the bases and
conduct the routine inspections, she is met with protests - apparently, no
officer dumped at this posting has ever actually carried out the inspection
duties. And that suits the neighboring rival government of the People's
Republic of Haven just fine - they're planning to take Basilisk Station,
the planet Medusa, and Basilisk's strategically valuable wormhole junction
away from Manticore. But Haven's plan is dependent on Manticore's long
record of lax customs enforcement - and no one counted on Honor Harrington
and the HMS Fearless uncovering the invasion plan, much less
single-handedly stopping it.

The kickoff of David Weber's cult favorite Honor Harrington series, On
Basilisk Station has a lot of ground to cover, from setting up the
characters, the universe, their intricate political situation and the
history that led to all of the above. The manner in which Weber
accomplishes this task is something I would describe as elegant clumsiness.
The author has worked out his universe, and why it is the way it is, in
painstaking detail; if there's a single fault, it's frequently Weber's
timing in putting the story on pause to deliver enormous chunks of
backstory. Make no mistake, he picks points in the story where the
background information is directly related to the action at hand, but this
doesn't alter the pacing-killing fact that he puts the book's climactic
space battle on hold several times to tell you about, for example,
the evolution of FTL travel in the Honorverse. It's interesting stuff, but
it's appendix stuff (and the book still has an appendix containing
more background information!), especially when the voice in the back of my
skull is screaming "But there's a bloody great space battle going on
right now! Why are you telling me this now?"

If you can get past that stylistic quirk - and the degree to which it
frustrates will probably vary from reader to reader - Basilisk
Station is a great chunk of action-packed, character-filled military
SF. (And this coming from someone who isn't even necessarily a huge fan of
military SF.) The strategies and their consequences, whether in blood or
politics, are worked out well, and they're smart stuff - just because Honor
hasn't worked out what the Big Picture is yet doesn't lessen the character
at all.
And about that character: it's no small wonder that Honor Harrington fan
sites have been crawling with suggestions of casting Claudia Christian in
the long-rumored, almost-inevitable movie based on the book. Now, to be
fair, it's much more a similarity of character than appearance, but Honor
Harrington could wipe the walls with Kathryn Janeway and probably clean up any
spots she missed with Susan Ivanova. This book doesn't really give her any
token moments of overt femininity, and it doesn't need to. She cares deeply
about her crew, never fully getting comfortable until all of the pieces are in
place and the relationships are worked out, but she also drives them to their
breaking point. None of the characters are so outlandish that you can't
believe them as bridge officers on a starship; their differences of opinion
lie within the bounds of military discipline, interpretation of orders, and
the somewhat uneasy honeymoon period that accompanies working under a new
commanding officer. I can honestly say I look forward to the later books
in the series.
So that just leaves one question, getting back to all those rumors - is
Honor Harrington ready for the big screen? Without a doubt she is, though
the biggest obstacle facing a movie or TV adaptation is shared with the
book: if it's awkward to slow a book down to drop in a bunch of backstory,
imagine doing that to a movie. And yet not covering all of
that backstory would inevitably have some decrying it as a Star Trek or
Babylon 5 clone, which would be doing On Basilisk Station a great
disservice.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster


- Year: 1993
- Author: David Weber
- Genre: science fiction
- Publisher: Baen
- Pages: 464 pages
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