• Earth II: "You Have No Honor."

  • Virus/Earth II, Volume 3
  • By: Ray Jay Perreault
  • Narrated by: Raymond Perreault
  • Length: 10 hrs and 33 mins
  • 4.2 out of 5 stars (6 ratings)

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Earth II: "You Have No Honor."  By  cover art

Earth II: "You Have No Honor."

By: Ray Jay Perreault
Narrated by: Raymond Perreault
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Publisher's summary

A suspicious virus has wiped out almost all of the human race. The few survivors in the US Government and Military know who caused the virus, and they are fighting the last battles on the planet to save the survivors.

Two super Thinking Computers were released when their programmers died because of the virus. They have no controls, and one is programmed to help the humans, and the other has its own agenda. They seek the source of the virus, one is intent on returning and ultimately dealing with those who threaten it. The other must deal with the bad computer and still fulfill its programming to help the humans.

This is the end to Epoch 1 of the SIMPOC (Books one and two) and Virus (Books one and two) series.

©2016 Raymond Perreault (P)2017 Raymond Perreault

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Listener received this title free

It Just Keeps Getting Better

This is the 3rd book in the series unless you started with the Simpoc series as I did as that would make this the fifth. As stated elsewhere, the Simpoc series tells the story of a major virus that attacks all of Earth almost at the same time. Many of the events are told from the point of view of a new organic processor that makes up a thinking computer (We would call this an AI or Artificial Intelligence.) Simpoc I and Simpoc II are the first two and only parts of this series. Both books were later expanded with more of a focus on the humans and these expanded volumes of the same story are called Virus and Virus II. All four of these books were narrated by a group with many sound effects and voices for the different parts. You could tell radio communication because of the beeps and tinny sounds that accompanied the voices. You could tell computer voices because they sounded like computer voices. This entire narration method was way over the top to the point of distraction. But did make for an interesting listen.

In the 3rd book of the Virus series: Virus/Earth II – You Have No Honor, the author decided to have a go at narrating this one himself. Other than the extreme shock of the difference in style, I think he did ok. It really sounded like at least two or possibly three different voices that would suddenly switch between them. I think it would have been better with some (but definitely not all) of the sound effects from the prior books. Overall this one was a decent listen.

Story wise this whole series has been quite interesting and in my opinion this is the best one so far. I know there are several more books in the series but they have not been narrated yet. Assuming the narration improves like the books have this will be a good series to listen to.

One note... I still haven't figured out where the "Earth II" moniker comes in!

I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.

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A really enjoyable alien invasion story

This is just a lot of fun.

Be aware it's the third book of a trilogy, but I didn't find that to be a problem. There's enough information salted in on the backstory that I picked it up pretty quickly and understood enough of what the characters were responding to.

A massive pandemic has wiped out a large part of the human population of the planet, and now alien ships are in orbit and sending smaller ships down with robot crews. They seem to be ignoring the humans, and indifferent to life forms that aren't attacking them. Machinery is something else, though--so aircraft and naval ships, for instance, are treated as threats. The surviving human population, in the government and military around the world, are trying to mount a defense against the aliens.

Meanwhile, the US has, or had, two supercomputers, Julius and SIMPOC, which were released by the deaths of their creators, and have made themselves mobile. SIMPOC is programmed to help humans. Julius, on the other hand, seems to have been programmed for maximum paranoia. Julius is determined to wipe out the biggest threats to its existence, which is to say, SIMPOC and the remaining humans.

Then there's the question of the aliens, and their agenda. They, or their robots, seem to be focused on Earth's resources, but to what end? Once the robots have achieved control, will colonists be coming? Or will reinforcements arrive if the robots take longer than expected to achieve control?

We're following several groups as they try to respond to the crisis. At the Space Consortium, Joan and Tom Herl, respectively head of the Mars colonization project and chief engineer, and SIMPOC, along with the rest of the team, need to figure out how to best support the team on Mars, give them the best chance of getting home--and then how they're going to help resist the invasion. The scientists and engineers on Mars have made some useful discoveries, though, and may be in less of a crisis, at least least of an immediate crisis, than those back on Earth.

The President, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and others at Norfolk (where what's left of the government has relocated after unfortunate events in DC), are trying to organize a military defense--and face the uncomfortable choice of whether to make an alliance with the Russian forces. We also see the different US Navy fleets confronting the alien forces and figuring out by trial and error what works and what doesn't. One interesting bit is the Lieutenant j.g. Darlene Drummond, senior surviving officer on an aircraft carrier after the virus hit, who has managed to get the ship with its less than skeleton crew back to Norfolk. Once there, she happily awaits the assignment of a new captain, only to find out that, in the current crisis conditions, she is the new captain. They don't have extra personnel hanging around, and she proved herself able to handle the ship in a crisis.

In the Pacific, a fleet is making its way to Hawaii after the virus, when they learn they're now confronting an alien invasion, and the base in Hawaii is of course also understaffed due to the virus.

And of course, there's the paranoid supercomputer, Julius, who views the aliens more as a potential opportunity than a common threat it ought to be working with the others to defeat. This doesn't, though, mean that the aliens ought to trust it.

There's a lot of good characters here, whom I enjoyed getting to know. Perreault also manages to keep all these different subplots moving and making sense, as the story build toward its climax.

This is, as I said, a lot of fun, and very exciting. Perreault also does a very good job reading his own work, which is not something you can count on. Voice acting is a very different profession than writing, and not everyone develops both skills well.

Recommended.

I received a free copy of this audiobook from the author, and am reviewing it voluntarily.

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