![]() We're knee deep in Hamilton and Reynolds bugcrushers, yet you're relatively hard to find. But maybe I've misunderstood what it's about?)Īnd, Neal, if you see this: beat up your agent and publisher (or whoever) until they make your books more accessible over here in the US. Shadow of the Scorpion is set some time before the above Cormac series alternating between when he was a child and when he was an army grunt. Incidentally, how is that a 'stand alone' if it also features Ian Cormac? It may be a separate story if the other five tell a single one, but I wouldn't think to call it stand alone. That I think I will wait on - it may be a prequel, but it's written after and - for a very weird analogy, but the only one that immediately comes to mind, other than maybe some Flandry ordering - I don't think anyone should read A Stainless Steel Rat is Born before they read the original trilogy. ![]() And once they are through, the gate they use is dumped into the sun, as something dangerous and non-human is in pursuit. If I generally prefer reading series in order but I'm getting tired of getting hung up waiting for things to fall into place, should I wait for The Line of Polity or is reading Brass Man directly after Gridlinked an option? Polity Agent is the fourth novel in Neal Asher's popular Agent Cormac series.Refugees arrive in the Polity from eight hundred years in Agent Cormac’s future. I've read The Engineer Reconditioned and (more relevantly) Gridlinked. ![]() Maybe I should start a new thread for this but general 'ordering' questions seem relevant. ![]()
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