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Jan. 11, 2008 By scallahan
"A great read" Not often can you buy a top notch Sci-Fi novel for just $3 anymore. I downloaded the PDF for Michael Puttre's novel, Outre Mer and after a couple of dozen pages I was hooked! The intro is a bit long and dialog heavy, but once you get past that your preseverence will be well rewarded. He weaves a complex universe of hard sci-fi technology and "realpolitik" that seems all too real. I look forward to other books by this author based in his unique universe. Surely there must be more after he has carefully crafted such a complex world of factions and characters. I heartily recommend this book.
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Jul. 5, 2009 By judge
"Plausible Fiction"
I just finished reading Outre Mer by Michael Puttre. The book was a pleasure to read from cover to cover. The action starts early and rolls right through the book. Brief interludes and interesting background bits help fill in the historical gaps without overloading the reader. As a result, the characters within Outre Mer not only have a present and a future, but a past as well.



Outre Mer has a little something for everyone except an agenda. Puttre has woven plausible starship technology with a complex political structure. Diverse factions are represented honestly from individual member view points. As a result, the reader experiences Puttre’s world from... More > several points of view, each with their own prejudices and preconceptions. A couple of the factions are left a little too shadowy and seem to be an unnecessary layer of complexity.



What you won’t find in Outre Mer is a maniacal madman bent on destruction for destruction’s sake. The entire cast of characters is a mix of saint and sinner. Some more saint, others more sinner. All of them enjoyable; a couple of them are even likable.



The book manages to unfold surprise after surprise; I even found myself say, “Of course! Why didn’t I see that.” Most of the surprises are foreshadowed. For a brief time, Puttre walks a fine line between co-incidence and manipulation but the issue is trivial with no real harm to the story. His weave of politics, military science, and colonial angst shines through.



If you enjoy science fiction, this book will be an enjoyable read. If you have someone on your shopping list that enjoys a good sci-fi book this one would work well.

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Aug. 3, 2009 By Christopher Gerrib
"Great Space Opera!"
I just finished reading Michael Puttre’s first novel, Outre Mer, and I was very favorably impressed. Michael is a writer and editor with military specialization, which shows through favorably in his writing. His grasp of matters military and political are impressive, and this book is the kind of big story that defines the term “space opera.”



The story is set in a future where mankind, having saved itself from “The Rock” (an asteroid deflected by the US Air Force) and fought a war with The Grays (an alien race that has been kidnapping humans since 1947) has settled a number of inhabitable worlds in various star systems. However, in Puttre’s... More > view, mankind is no more united then we are now. One faction, the Phalangists, terriforms worlds by burning the atmosphere and surface to ash – an act we see from several perspectives, including a Greenpeace-like spaceship. Unlike their 21st century counterparts, Starpeace ships pack heat, and aren’t afraid to use it.



Puttre has a long but action-filled prologue where we learn much of this while seeing members of the Outer Systems Service (OSS) a cross between the CIA and a space fleet try to recover a Phalangist defector. The story then shifts to the world of Outre Mer, an Earth-like moon of a gas giant. The moon is populated by human refugees, descendants of those kidnapped by the Grays, and a curious race called Durranis, which are small forest-dwelling creatures. Given artificial hands, they prove to be every bit as intelligent as humans. The rest of the story is an increasingly tense multi-faction struggle between the Durranis and the various human factions on and around Outre Mer.



Puttre’s writing is clear and strong, although a bit florid at times, but quite riveting. He weaves a cast of a dozen characters, all believable, through his story in a way that has you rooting for all of them. In Puttre’s world, there is no absolute right and wrong, only shades of gray, and even the apparent “bad guys” aren’t as bad as they seem.



I highly recommend this book to any fans of science fiction. It has aliens, politics, military, and even a bit of romance. There’s something for everybody in Outre Mer.

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Jul. 3, 2008 By rnsulentic
"Big Ideas, Big Space Opera"
I have a weakness for Space Opera. Even when I was a kid--when Larry Niven's "Known Space" stories first captivated me. More recently, I've become a fan of Ian Bank's "Culture" novels, Alistair Reynold's "Revelation Space" novels and Walter Jon William's "Dread Empire's Fall" trilogy. Michael Puttre's "Outre Mer" compares favorably to the scope of these authors.

Outre Mer is set in a universe where humanity has gone to the stars and seems to have splintered almost immediately into various factions. In the background is a menacing alien race, 'the Greys' ala' Roswell who have been kidnapping humans since 1947. It seems that a war was fought (and won,... More > phyrrically) against the Greys, and the 'taken' returned.

But not to humanity. Instead, the taken are quarantined on their own planet, Outre Mer, Which happens to have a sentient race, the Durranni, on it. Why do that? As one of the characters says "It seemed a good idea at the time". But of course it isn't and the interStellar United Nations has decided that the taken are to be removed and settled elsewhere. But the taken don't want to go, and in what is obviously a nod to Star Trek and the prime directive, the humans of Outre Mer have not only made contact with the Durranni, but they have 'awakened' them (reminding one of David Brin's 'uplift' novels) and the iSUN have given a 'mandate' to the PAX (a combination of 'childeren of Abraham'--Jews, Christians and Muslims) to keep the awakened Duranni and the humans of Outre Mer from 'contaminating' the remaining still aboriginal Duranni. This mandate appears to include killing off awakened Duranni and anyone else that gets in the way of the PAX.

Despite all that, the PAX isn't a bunch of fundie eviltrons; The taken aren't pure innocents. Puttre has taken care to craft multidimensional characters, that are easy to care about.

So, Outre Mer revolts, and can they pull it off? That is the thrust of the main story arc, but there are some side story arcs and enough detail hinted at to make one want to know more about this universe.

Puttre's background as a defense technology wonk shows--space warfare here is a mix of electronics and missles and small ships. No huge space battleships or star destroyers here. But its all the more interesting for that.

There is a lot here to chew on. My only real complaint is that it ends too quickly. < Less
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Oct. 29, 2006 By Jim Scanlan
"Outre Mer" Michael Puttre's Outre Mer is a page-turning delight, where winning isn't always winning and you can't always tell, nor should you be able to, the good guys from the bad.

The author's science and technology background is evident in the spot-on technical descriptions, and I suspect I read the work of a political junkie, as well. Anyone else smile when encountering the acronym OSS, for Outer Systems Service?

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Product Details

ISBN 978-1-4303-0096-0
Copyright Standard Copyright License
Edition First Edition
Publisher Michael Puttre
Published February 12, 2007
Language English
Pages 320
 
Binding Perfect-bound Paperback
Interior Ink Black & white
Dimensions (inches) 6.0 wide × 9.0 tall

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