With terse prose and hairpin twists, Daniel Schwabauer’s galactic noir Operation Grendel sizzles through the circuits of the human soul.

Operation Grendel

On a remote tropical moon, military journalist Raymin Dahl can no longer just report on the mission. He’s ordered to complete it.
December 2021 · Share a reply or review

It’s the war story he’s dreamed of. But the battle may cost him his mind.

Military journalist Raymin Dahl thinks he’s finally getting the story of a lifetime. Secret peace talks on a remote tropical moon are about to surrender five colonized worlds—and six hundred million civilians—to a ruthless enemy.

But when his commanding officer, Captain Ansell Sterling, is fatally wounded before the negotiations can begin, Dahl can no longer just report on the mission. He’s ordered to complete it.

With help from the AI embedded in Sterling’s comms bracelet, Dahl must impersonate his commander—a Marine Corps hero and psychological operations expert. However, Sterling’s AI may be luring him to surrender more than he realizes. And the mission Corporal Dahl thinks he’s running isn’t the only operation underway.

Review of Operation Grendel

· April 2021

When you’re fighting to keep your free will, you need to know who you are. But what if your mission requires a false identity? In Daniel Schwabauer’s Operation Grendel, Corporal Raymin Dahl, propagandist for the beleaguered United Colonies, receives a terrible assignment: cover the peace talks that will abandon billions of people to an enemy who enslaves minds. But when events spiral out of control and reporter becomes negotiator, Raymin must come face-to-face with that most deadly of masters: his own heartfelt desire. With terse prose and hairpin twists, this galactic noir sizzles through the circuits of the human soul. Alienation—the kind you don’t need light-years to experience—forms a recurrent theme. Bullets fly, artificial intelligences probe, and reality melds with illusory augmentation. But when the connection drops, don’t look away. The operation may not be over.

Best for: Young adults and adults seeking a dark and twisty noir.

Discern: Military sci-fi violence, depictions of torture, references to cohabitation, some sensuality and disturbing imagery.

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