Profile

Five Figure Fanwork Exchange

March 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
23456 78
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Entry Policy

A community for the Five Figure Fic/Fanwork Exchange.

Most Popular Tags

(no subject)

Date: 2020-07-19 06:16 pm (UTC)
athaia: (Default)
From: [personal profile] athaia
Title: The Course of Empire, by Eric Flint

Media Book (it's the first of a trilogy, and arguably the best of the three)

Where to find it: Amazon, both as a physical book or ebook.

What it is and what I love about it:

There aren’t that many books where the aliens have won, and won for good, and the ones that do exist focus more on the heroic human resistance than on the part of the population that has resigned themselves to their fate. The Course of Empire is, as far as I know, the only one that doesn’t only do that, but also has one of the aliens as the main character, depicting much of the story from his point of view.

And the aliens in this book are marvellous! Complex, truly alien, consistent, with a unique outsider view of Earth and humans, and completely unapologetic in treating us as their subjects. I read somewhere that the relationship between them and the humans was inspired by Britain’s colonization of India, and I can see that — we are a vassal species to them, and the very fact that we were defeated justifies their treatment of us in their eyes. The twist is that they once were a slave species themselves, so they have a very... pragmatic attitude towards the concept.

There is a human resistance, but it’s scattered and internally divided, and usually outmatched by the aliens, with no hope of liberating the planet. That is also the opinion of the vast majority of humans, who just try to keep their head down and survive, and who don’t give a damn whether their taxes are collected by human or alien bastards. But what I found most interesting were the jinau — human auxiliaries in the service of the Jao, the alien conquerors. Ed Kralik, one of the major characters of the book, is a former member of the US military, who chose to enlist with the jinau after the war was well and truly lost.

The book doesn’t side with the rebels or with the collaborators/colonized, as it mostly tells the story from the viewpoint of the new alien liaison who is meant to take over from the old governor of the planet, which is really refreshing. I don’t want to give away the whole plot, but there is some good stuff for fanfic in there — from the political side, to the romance between Ed Kralik and the daughter of the president (yes, there still is a president of the United States, even if the position is now mostly ceremonial), and even some angst and whump (the aliens capture a rebel and “retrain” him... to the point where he chooses to stay with them when he has the choice to leave).
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Style Credit