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Overkill
by Robert Buettner

At twenty-three, Jazen Parker has completed his Legion hitch a hero. But in four months, he'll have a price on his head. Worse, he's lost his past, and he can’t find his future. Worst of all, he's chosen to search for them on the deadliest planet known to mankind.

When Jazen reluctantly hires on to a Trueborn Earthman tycoon's safari to bag a deadly trophy, the reluctant mercenary finds himself shipped out to Downgraded Earthlinke 476, the outpost at the end of the universe known to everyone except its tourism bureau as "Dead End."

But the hunt goes terribly wrong, and Jazen must survive a tough, beautiful local guide who hates mercenaries, an eleven ton beast that can crush main battle tanks with one claw tied behind its back, and the return of a nightmare that has haunted Jazen since birth. Then Jazen learns that the stakes are not merely his own life, but the fate of an entire alien race.

About the Author

Robert Buettner was born July 7, 1947 in Manhattan, grew up in Cleveland and eventually slid west to Colorado. He earned a B.A. from the College of Wooster, with Honors in geology, then studied as a National Science Foundation Fellow in Paleontology at the University of Cincinnati, earning a Juris Doctorate. He worked in mining as a rig hand and prospector in the Sonoran Desert of Southwest Texas and the mountains of Alaska, and worked his way through law school as a petroleum geologist. He practiced natural resources law while serving out his Army Reserve Intelligence Commission as a Captain. He has been writing fiction since 1994. When not writing, he’s run marathons, climbed mountains, snowboarded and scuba'd. He currently lives in the foothills of the Blue Ridge north of Atlanta with his family and more bikes than a grownup needs.

Published 3/1/2011
SKU: 9781439134207
Ebook Price: $6.00 
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Showing comments 1-10 of 12 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
1. Rob on 4/13/2011, said:

ROBERT BUETTNER'S REPLY TO JASON: Thanks for the kind words about Overkill, and thanks for your service. Okay, one more time. You are exactly right about the Abrams, but so is Overkill. REREAD the passages. As you say, the Abrams carries extra ammo in a thin-lidded hull box, outboard of the turret. Overkill says EXACTLY AND ONLY that. The fictional Kodiak hovertank has a very different sponson (fender) and carries ITS extra ammo in ITS thin-lidded sponson box, outboard of ITS turret. As for entry, you describe how the driver exits, then reenters, a tank thru the TC's hatch when the turret is reversed for transport. That is EXACTLY what and why Jazen and Zhondro do that in Overkill. I have photos of me aboard an Abrams prep'd for transport to Iraq that demonstrate all this. I'll do a blog post showing this to put it to rest. But probably futile. Dad was a tanker. Mom said you can always tell tankers, but you can't tell 'em much. Sigh.
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2. Jason on 4/11/2011, said:

I quite enjoyed this book, but really wanted to weigh in on the Abrams debate. I have to say, you may have gotten better info visiting 1st BCT, 3ID (Go Raiders!). In one invasion of a sovereign country and a follow on tour in some of its nicest cities, I never saw a sponson box with main gun ammo in it. Hull storage is a six round ammo holder accessed by putting the tank in travel lock turret position ( gun over back deck, off center ~5 degrees). A pain in the ass to get to because it is in the um... hull. Sponson boxes are for pogie bait and machine gun ammo and sleeping on. They have blow off panels if you consider lowest bidder construction "blow off". Really more akin to fall off construction. The blow out panels are over the main gun storage – two large panels over the ready and semi ready racks (also good for sleeping), only place on the tank that has them. And no disrespect, a driver can definitely get into the hole thru the turret, but in travel lock the drivers hole is very accessible. However, usually when you put a tank into travel lock you are transporting it. So the drivers secure the hatch internally, crawl out thru the turret and then put a padlock on the TCs station to secure the vehicle. So the only way to get back in is reverse the process. The hardest time to get out of a drivers hole is when the TC max depresses the gun and slews slightly to the left or right. Ah, good times. Regardless of tank minutia this is a great read that I would strongly recommend. Not writers fault he got bad gouge. Still a rollicking good read.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (1 people found this comment helpful, 2 did not)
3. John on 3/3/2011, said:

Interestingly, the only two commenters who said the book was less than great didn't read it (tank grouch and grouch whose download didn't work).
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (6 people found this comment helpful, 1 did not)
4. John on 3/1/2011, said:

files corrupted for me.... tried several. Reading online
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 7 did not)
5. Julius on 2/26/2011, said:

As with the Orphan Series, Overkill is spellbinding. You pick up the book and begin reading and are so captivated that you cannot put it down. As usual the reader is left excited and desiring the next book.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (6 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
6. Kim on 2/21/2011, said:

Best yet. Loved this author's previous books. This one's even better.
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7. Robert on 2/19/2011, said:

ROBERT BUETTNER'S REPLY TO GUY-FRANCIS: Delighted you enjoyed Overkill. It's actually not my 1st novel. It's the 1st in a sequel series to the bestselling 5-volume series that began with 2004 Quill Award nominee "Orphanage." Overkill's designed as a solid stand-alone read, and obviously was for you. But some stuff you wished you knew more about can probably be filled in, or clarified by, the first 5 books.
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8. Robert on 2/19/2011, said:

ROBERT BUETTNER'S SHORT REPLY TO TANK DETAILS COMMENT. This shrinks for others my reply to a commenter who apparently skimmed Overkill's sample and criticized the book (without reading it) for two PERCEIVED "jarring fact errors." But Overkill's 100% right about both. Now, mainly, Overkill's a great read, not a tank manual. Buy it. Often. However, readers also should know that Overkill's real-world details are true, and based on solid research and author experience. So, briefly: Abrams tanks DO carry some ammunition in a thin-topped box outboard of the turret, called the hull box, or emergency rounds box. Also, when the gun points aft for transport, drivers often enter via the turret, because the turret bustle obstructs the driver hatch. If such details jazz you, see my long reply, below. Otherwise, just enjoy Overkill.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (16 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
9. Guy-Francis on 2/18/2011, said:

Overkill is a great book. An interesting setting is painted in elegantly broad brush strokes, even whilst a detailed story is told in a personal and arresting fashion. I especially like how the Grezzen’s perspective was integrated into the story. All round this was a great first novel and I look forward to more stories in this world and any other the author comes up with. The only reason I did not give the book five stars is that I felt that the story just lacked a little depth; not that the story was shallow per se, but there just seemed, especially at the end, a certain something missing; this might because I would have liked to see all the political intrigues and dealings implicit in the story laid out in detail and instead the story wound up quite quickly; put it down to personal preference and by no means a reflection on one of the most imaginative pieces of science fiction I have read in a while. I would certainly advise anyone who likes science fiction with a new and unique story to tell to pick up a copy. As for the discussion about the Abrams; seriously, mate get over it, we talking about a story with A GIANT ARMOURED CARNIVOROUS TELEPATHIC BUFFALO IN IT! And you found the tank descriptions jarring? Mate you got to get out more.
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10. David on 2/18/2011, said:

Brilliant, I couldn't put it down. Actually I bought it to go on my kindle but didnt even wait long enough to transfer it and read it all on a laptop screen in one sitting!
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Showing comments 1-10 of 12 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
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