Ratings19
Average rating4.4
"When a mission ends in disaster—there is no way to achieve the objective, no way to regroup and try again, no plan B, no hope—all you can do is fall back into failure mode and try to salvage what you can. If it is even possible to save anything, or anyone. The galaxy is doomed. Monkeys may be clever and too stubborn to give up, but Skippy the idiot who got played knows the harsh truth: this is a fight he can’t win. The odds are not only stacked against him, he was designed not to win this fight. Maybe he can salvage some faint memory of the civilizations that inhabit the galaxy, but those beings are doomed. Doomed. Including the Merry Band of Pirates"--Cover, page 4.
Reviews with the most likes.
Failure Mode by Craig Alanson is book 15 of Expeditionary Force. Although there is (at least) one more ExForce book forthcoming, book 15 was originally billed as the end of the series. I've loved this comedic military sci-fi saga, and Failure Mode was no exception. I feel the need to clarify that neither this book nor this series are particularly well-written. No offense to Mr. Alanson, but these books are often repetitive and would benefit from some good editing. Failure Mode, and some of the prior books, have relied on deus ex machina to overcome obstacles. Failure Mode featured some scenes should of been emotionally moving, but just didn't totally stick the landing for me. With that said, what Alanson has done delightfully well throughout the series is write fantastically funny dialogue and vignettes, as well as flesh out a really compelling sci-fi world and develop some really loveable characters. I enjoyed getting to spend more time with Joe and Skippy, and see a fantastic climax for the series come to fulfillment. I'm also glad this isn't really the end. Criticism not withstanding, Alanson knows how to write FUN fiction, and I'll read anything he publishes. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫
Featured Series
15 primary books17 released booksExpeditionary Force is a 17-book series with 15 primary works first released in 2016 with contributions by Craig Alanson.