KevinRo said:
Oh well, hopefully first strike is good.
I've heard that most people enjoyed
First Strike and
Ghosts of Onyx better than
The Flood, but ultimately, it's the same scenario. Most of the Halo novels revolve around Spartans and UNSC scenarios which involved heavy-hitting characters like Keyes, Johnson and Halsey.
As I read more and more into the fiction of Halo, I become less intrigued by the Spartans and the UNSC and more fascinated by the Covenant culture, the history of the Elites, Prophets and after
Contact Harvest, the fiction behind the Brutes and the Jackals. I'm not entirely certain why that is or if its the fact that we have been overloaded with information about the human's perspective, but that's just my general vibe with the fiction itself right now.
For example, there's a story in
The Cole Protocol which I found fascinating. The dramatic majority of the novel is focused around the Admiral Cole's protocol enforcement by Keyes, an insurrectionist base on an asteroid and the calamity that erupts between them and the localized Jackal conscript BUT -- there's a story that one of the leading Elites tell about an ancient kaidon (Sangheili leader) who had a war with another Elite. The latter won the war and took power while this particular kaidon was jailed for humiliation. The honorable among those who were imprisoned killed themselves in shame, but some lived their days in pity. This kaidon eventually escaped and traveled into the wilderness and across a desert, eventually building a force of mercenaries strong enough to challenge his supplanting enemy. He returned with his forces and took revenge, killing every last enemy and their lineage. Then he returned to the cells where his former allies were - the ones who had not killed themselves for their own failure -- and murdered them.
Now, that's the kind of story I'd like to see in a Halo book. A sweeping epic which revolves around these incredibly interesting characters who may be alien within the constraints of the fiction but are in many ways emphatic meta-reflections of ourselves and the cultures of humanity, both past and present.
Unfortunately, as I stated earlier, the Halo novels are being marketed to a specific crowd of people. I'm no expert, but I'd gather that the majority of people who buy these novels are young males between the ages of 14 and 17 and for them, the Spartans are still the most interesting thing about Halo. For example, one of the biggest complaints about
Contact Harvest, I am told, is that there are no Spartans. For me, Contact Harvest is the best Halo novel yet and largely for the reasons explained above.