Loerwyn said:
I don't think it was military SF. There were M-SF elements there, certainly (and more so in the second), but for the most part it was more an investigation novel, so I think most would class it as space opera.
1) It's getting marketed and talked about as military SF. Every time I'm digging into military SF titles, it pops up on people's lists and they're calling it that. The second title is called Caliban's War and the series is about brewing wars, on-going wars and war-torn space colonies, so I don't think the war part is missing there.
2) Space opera is epic with interplanetary political, military and adventure events. Weber's Honor Harrington series is space opera and military -- they are not mutually exclusive. The big space operas that involve wars are related to the battle epics of fantasy, although they are certainly not the same things.
But my point was not to say that Corey's books are just like Joe Abercrombie's, only that they are comfortably in the neighborhood. Corey's series isn't a quiet tale of robots wondering if they are human or time travel gone wrong. (Not that people in the forums don't like that sort of thing either.)
ArtNJ said:
This strikes me as incredibly dismissive and wrong
It's only dismissive if you think that I consider battle fiction to be dismissed and lesser. I certainly don't. I'm unofficially the secretary of the unofficial Joe Abercrombie fan club here. And when I said that half tended to avoid female written works, I wasn't saying that half was all men. There are quite a few female members here who avoid them too, because that's their choice, and there are lots and lots of female members here who read battle epics, military SF, etc. There is a definite preference on these forums among a large faction of vocal participants for really liking battle epics, though not exclusively. That's neither good nor bad and it's very much in keeping with the larger fantasy field in which battle epics have always been popular. The top ten choices for the last few years have thus heavily favored battle epic fantasies and other books that do often involve big battle stories. That's not the only type that gets on, but it's predominant, and as we've seen here, I'm not the only one to notice it. I'm sorry if you don't think battle stories can be complex and have depth; that's a view that I've clearly disagreed with in the past.
Ready Player One is homage to all video game culture, including pong. It is not a "fighting video game situation".
The hero has to battle corporate gangsters through various game universes to find his golden ticket. I'll agree to rephrase it as a cyberpunk video game adventure thriller, however. But video games do primarily involve battles and the VR universe of the story is indeed filled with battles, such as "where spell-slinging mages battle giant Japanese robots, entire planets are inspired by Blade Runner," etc. The hero has an X-Wing fighter. The climax of the story is a battle of giant robots. So again, it's not a battle epic fantasy. But it is comfortably in the neighborhood for those who like battle epic fantasy. And again, that does not happen to be an assertion that the novel is not soulful, complex, etc.
Darksbane said:
I don't really think that Wise Man's Fear is a battle epic either, is it?
LOL, no, though the series is headed there. They just really, really like that trilogy, which is a homage and satire of epic fantasy, including big battle coming of age fantasy fiction. It's not like they are only allowed to like the battle epics. They just tend to like a lot of them, and so we see that reflected in the Top Ten list of favorites.
I think it more likely that in my case it is that most of the books I read are ones that I hear about on this forum. Since I started posting here, I've actually read less and less from female authors.
Well, we'll work on that, maybe. If I can get past the first quarter from hell, I'm hoping to talk about more books.
Sullivan said:
Let's talk after book 6 ;-)
I never said that they weren't honorable, just that I think you're underplaying the honorability of Cook and Lynch's characters with similar backgrounds to yours, and missing the larger picture of fantasy rogue fiction in general.

We'll chat in your threads. (For those interested, Sullivan kills at dialogue, IMO.)