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Reviews for Starhawk: Planet America

 Starhawk magazine reviews

The average rating for Starhawk: Planet America based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-06-23 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 3 stars Christine Lewis
The Starhawk series is a very odd and puzzling thing. The original sixteen Hawk Hunter Wingman books were published from 1987-1999 by Zebra and Pinnacle with "Men's Adventure" printed on the spine as the genre tag. About a decade and a half later Hawk-as-Wingman was rebooted with a seventeenth book, and so far two more have appeared subsequently. In between, though, we had the five Starhawk books, which Ace published in the first few years of the new millennium, with "Science Fiction" printed on their spines. The covers are military sf/space opera scenes, with a man over the title who looks nothing much like the way Hawk was ever described. There are elements of the original books, but mixed in with liberal dollops of Buck Rogers or Flash Gordon with lots of Star Wars imagery. The Wingman books are all filled with pulpish hyperbole, but it's escalated by several orders of magnitude in Starhawk. Hawk is introduced in the first book with a profound sense of confusion and dislocation and a sense that he isn't quite sure what's going on; it's a feeling that continues and dominates the series. Hawk's never quite sure what it's all about, and neither is the reader. They're always waiting for a big reveal that's unfortunately never paid off, though we get hints and bits and pieces along the way. Is it all a dream or an alternate universe or a chess game guided by divine intervention? We never find out for sure, though I suppose it does lead to the freedom to reach your own conclusion, and Hawk is all about the importance of freedom. The individual plot points of the Starhawk books have all blurred in my memory, but I do remember enjoying the individual reads, though the puzzles weren't resolved to my satisfaction. I certainly did not enjoy them as much as Wingman, but they were lightly entertaining (even though they occasionally bordered on the silly), and didn't seem to me to embrace the pulp values of the earlier books.
Review # 2 was written on 2010-06-02 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Steven Cybulski
A true thrift store lark. I purchased this book not expecting to be blown away by it. My goal was a little enjoyment but large sections of this book just made me laugh out loud. It is funny, sassy, and well-written. The sci-fi is not hard to follow and moves along at a decent pace. Maybe this book is not for everyone but it is fun. =) This book is a keeper. =)


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