Welcome! Please login or sign up for a new account
 
Categories
Publishers
Authors
  John Joseph Adams
  Jerry Ahern
  Sharon Ahern
  Aaron Allston
  James G. Anderson
  Poul Anderson
  Christopher Anvil
  Jon Armstrong
  Catherine Asaro
  Chuck Asay
  Neal Asher
  Nancy Asire
  Robert Asprin
  Paolo Bacigalupi
  Jim Baen
  Bradley P. Beaulieu
  Kage Baker
  Margaret Ball
  Laird Barron
  Amelia Beamer
  Elizabeth Bear
  Greg Bear
  Clare Bell
  Gregory Benford
  Nigel Bennett
  Ben Bova
  Steven R. Boyett
  Leigh Brackett
  Marion Zimmer Bradley
  Jeff Bredenberg
  Poppy Z. Brite
  Damien Broderick
  Mary Brown
  M. M. Buckner
  Robert Buettner
  Lois McMaster Bujold
  Jack Cady
  Jaqueline Carey
  Lillian Stewart Carl
  John F. Carr
  Jeffrey A. Carver
  Paul Chafe
  Jack L. Chalker
  A. Bertram Chandler
  C. J. Cherryh
  Claudia Christian
  Julie Cochrane
  Hal Colebatch
  Stoney Compton
  Robert Conroy
  Glen Cook
  Rick Cook
  Seamus Cooper
  Sharon Cooper
  Larry Correia
  Richard Cox
  John Dalmas
  Tony Daniel
  Ellen Datlow
  L. Sprague deCamp
  John DeChancie
  Virginia DeMarce
  Michael Dempsey
  Andrew Dennis
  Bradley Denton
  Gordon R. Dickson
  William C. Dietz
  Thomas M. Disch
  Larry Dixon
  Chris Dolley
  Linda L. Donahue
  James Doohan
  L. Warren Douglas
  David Drake
  Dave Duncan
  J. R. Dunn
  Doranna Durgin
  Rosemary Edghill
  George Alec Effinger
  Greg Egan
  Harlan Ellison
  P. N. Elrod
  Ru Emerson
  Terry England
  Rhonda Eudaly
  Linda Evans
  Philip Jose Farmer
  Bill Fawcett
  Leslie Fish
  Eric Flint
  Michael Flynn
  Judy Forward
  Robert L. Forward
  Leo Frankowski
  Dave Freer
  David Friedman
  Esther Friesner
  Teresa Frohock
  Charles E. Gannon
  Randall Garrett
  Harrison Geillor
  Marty Halpern
  Roberta Gellis
  Mark Geston
  Scott Gier
  Veronica Giguere
  James C. Glass
  Tom Godwin
  Arlene Golds
  Paula Goodlett
  Roland Green
  Martin Harry Greenberg
  Dave Grossman
  James E. Gunn
  Ellen Guon
  Joe Haldeman
  Edmond Hamilton
  Matthew Harrington
  Robert A. Heinlein
  John Helfers
  John G. Hemry
  P. C. Hodgell
  William Hope Hodgson
  James P. Hogan
  Cecelia Holland
  Sarah Hoyt
  Matthew Hughes
  Kameron Hurley
  Dean Ing
  Marianne S. Jablon
  John Hornor Jacobs
  Les Johnson
  Graham Joyce
  Richard Kadrey
  William H. Keith Jr.
  Caitlín R. Kiernan
  John Klima
  Jeffery D. Kooistra
  Marilyn Kosmatka
  Paul Kozerski
  Tom Kratman
  Mike Kupari
  Henry Kuttner
  Mercedes Lackey
  Jay Lake
  John Lambshead
  John Langan
  Joe R. Lansdale
  J. M. Lassen
  Keith Laumer
  Tim Lebbon
  Dennis Lee
  Sharon Lee
  Fritz Leiber
  Stina Leicht
  Murray Leinster
  Edward M. Lerner
  Holly Lisle
  Ross E. Lockhart
  John Love
  Brian Lumley
  Nathalie Mallet
  Barry N. Malzberg
  Julia S. Mandala
  W. G. Marshall
  Cody Martin
  Mark O. Martin
  Anne McCaffrey
  Robert McCammon
  J. M. McDermott
  Jack McDevitt
  Charles C. McGraw
  Will McIntosh
  Shirley Meier
  Steve Miller
  Elizabeth Moon
  Modean Moon
  Tracy S. Morris
  Howard L. Myers
  Larry Niven
  Ted Nolan
  Andre Norton
  Jody Lynn Nye
  Norvell W. Page
  Frederik Pohl
  Jerry Pournelle
  Tim Pratt
  Cherie Priest
  Dusty Rainbolt
  Hank Reinhardt
  Mike Resnick
  John Ringo
  Richard Roach
  Kim Stanley Robinson
  Spider Robinson
  Thomas S. Roche
  Selina Rosen
  Joel Rosenberg
  Rudy Rucker
  Fred Saberhagen
  Jennifer Saffrey
  Pamela Sargent
  John Scalzi
  Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
  Courtney Schafer
  James H. Schmitz
  Martin Scott
  Mark Sebanc
  Charles Sheffield
  Mark Shepherd
  Susan Shwartz
  Robert Silverberg
  Dan Simmons
  William Mark Simmons
  Clark Ashton Smith
  Cordwainer Smith
  L. Neil Smith
  Walter Spence
  Wen Spencer
  Ryk Spoor
  D. W. St. John
  Michael A. Stackpole
  Marc Stiegler
  S. M. Stirling
  Jonathan Strahan
  Jonathan Strahan-old
  Tim Sullivan
  Michael Swanwick
  Howard Tayler
  Travis S. Taylor
  Mark Teppo
  Thomas T. Thomas
  Brian M. Thomsen
  Mark Tier
  Harry Turtledove
  Catherynne M. Valente
  Mark L. Van Name
  Patrick A. Vanner
  A. E. Van Vogt
  Vernor Vinge
  Karl Edward Wagner
  Lars Walker
  David Weber
  Martha Wells
  T. K. F. Weisskopf
  K. D. Wentworth
  Steve White
  Liz Williams
  Mazarkis Williams
  Walter Jon Williams
  Michael Z. Williamson
  Robert Charles Wilson
  Jonathan Wood
  Timothy Zahn
  Roger Zelazny
  Rob Ziegler


$AltText


$AltText

Baen eBooks are available in the following DRM-free formats:
  • Mobi/Kindle/Palm
  • EPUB/Nook/Stanza
  • Sony LRF
  • Rocketbook
  • RTF
  • MS Reader
  • HTML/Online
Click your reader below for specific instructions on how to access your eBooks:
Apple iOS device (iPad)
Amazon Kindle
Nook
Previous  Up  Next" 
The Cobra Trilogy
by Timothy Zahn

He was a New Kind of Soldier,
Created for a New Kind of War!

Soldier . . .
The colony worlds Adirondack and Silvern fell to the Troft forces almost without a struggle. Outnumbered and on the defensive, Earth made a desperate decision. It would attack the aliens not from space, but on the ground—with forces the Trofts did not even suspect. Thus were created the Cobras, a guerilla force whose weapons were surgically implanted, invisible to the unsuspecting eye, yet undeniably deadly. But power brings temptation . . . and not all the Cobras could be trusted to fight for Earth alone. Jonny Moreau would learn the uses—and abuses—of his special abilities, and what it truly meant to be a Cobra.

Mercenary . . .
If anyone had told Jonny Moreau the Cobras would one day take orders from the alien Troft, he would have laughed without humor. He'd lost too many friends during the Troft war, though the Cobras triumphed in the end. Now, though, the Troft were trading partners—and they feared what might be a mutual danger: A new race, ruthless and tenacious, that threatened human space as well as Troft. And the offer was five new planets for the overcrowded Cobra worlds. Jonny's son Justin would carry the Moreau name to danger . . . and learn that it takes more than a Cobra father to make a Cobra son.

Governor . . .
Corwin Moreau is governor of Aventine, but the fact that the Moreau family has held power for so long is beginning to generate bad feelings in the Cobra Worlds Council. But Corwin's niece, Jasmine, faces the greatest challenge. Her only ambition is to become a Cobra—but no woman has ever been accepted to the Academy or ever will be, if her opponents have their way. Until a mission arises that demands her expertise, and requires that she be given the deadly Cobra implants. Because the enemy, too, knows that there are no female Cobras, and Jasmine can infiltrate without being suspected . . . she thinks. . . .

The Complete Cobra Generational Saga,
by the New York Times Best-Selling Author

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Timothy Zahn is a winner of the coveted Hugo Award for his novella, Cascade Point and is author of the New York Times best-selling Star Wars novel, Heir to the Empire. Born in Chicago, he earned a B.S. in physics from Michigan State University and an M.S. in physics from the University of Illinois. Selling his first story to Analog in 1978, he quickly attracted attention as a new writer of "hard" science fiction, based on real, cutting-edge science. In addition to his novels for Baen set in the Cobra universe, he has also written such popular series as the "Blackcollar," "Conqueror," and "Dragonback" novels. Zahn has written over twenty novels, including the recent works Angelmass and Manta's Gift. He and his family currently live in Oregon.

Published 9/1/2004
SKU: 0743488474
Ebook Price: $4.00 
Customers Also Bought
Ghost
Ghost
Choosers of the Slain
Choosers of the Slain
At All Costs
At All Costs
We Few
We Few

Included In
W200911 November 2009 Monthly Baen Bundle
W200911 November 2009 Monthly Baen Bundle
$15.00
     





Product Rating: (4.31)   # of Ratings: 13   (Only registered customers can rate)

(Only registered customers can rate)

1 - Terrible
2 - Bad
3 - OK
4 - Good
5 - Great
0% 50% 100%

Sort: New to Old RE-SORT COMMENTS:

Showing comments 1-2 of 2
1. Ronald on 7/24/2011, said:

I have been reading and rereading the Cobra books since they were first published. Timothy Zahn's best series. Publishing all three together in one book caused me to repurchase the trilogy in paperback. Now it looks like I'll have to buy the ebook version as well. Many hours of enjoyment for 4 bucks is hard to beat.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (2 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
2. Torben on 4/13/2010, said:

(sorry for the long text, but I cannot insert line feeds!) Part 1: Cobra! The first book in the trillogy is called Cobra. It is epic military space opera at it’s finest guerrilla style. The narrative style centers on focusing on parts of the main characters life. We jump from one place in time and space to the next in a pace that feels just right. These places and points in time make up the bulk of the story line and is seen from the main character Johnny Moreau’s point of view. Ocationally these parts are broken up with shorter interludes where we visit other key elements of the story line, mostly seen from a protagonist point of view. I would characterize the plot as one that has epic ambitions but perhaps struggles a bit too much to deliver cleaver solutions. It never dismembers the story though and each part of the book leaves you turning the page to find out what mischief our Cobra has gotten himself into now. One of the highlights the novel is that it centers around the human equatiions that make up Johnny Moreau. You just cannot help but enjoy the guys company, which is vital in good space opera. The main alien antagonist The Tugft are not that well fletched out but do feel enough alien to feel real. I would like to have seen some more alien psychology introduction on them earlier on in the book though. Was it a good read? Yes, epic in scale, well written, a believable main character with a lot of wonderful operatic content. It would make a great movie, maybe with Bruce Willis as Johnny Moreau? Part 2: Cobra Strike The second installment into the Cobra Trilogy by Thimothy Zahn takes us on a journy further into the perils of the newfound Cobra worlds. A new threat on an unfamiliar horizon is the perfect settimg for another Cobra mission. This time around the tale is spun not only from the viewpoint of Johnny Moreau but also from several other members of the Moreau family. This expansion of the main cast is both a highlight of the novel but also removes the focus and depth you get by following a more singular main character. A good portion of the book is used to setup the Moreau family and the various mechanisms driving them in the forthcoming adventure. When the action finally appears Zahn delivers in style bouncing neatly of the character building and plot threads done earlier in the book. After reading the book I tried to recall other works about man making first contact with potentially dangerous worlds and in comparison I feel that this part of the story was the weakest point. However it does not overshadow that this is a good and solid read, easily recommended to fans of the first book. Part 3 – Cobra Bargin This is the last piece of the Cobra Trilogy and so far my favorite of the bunch. The first book covered Johnny Moreau’s life spanning several years which left me feeling somewhat fragmentet. In the this book we follow Jin, daughter of on of Johnny’s sons. The rest of the Moreau family is still present but their involvement is kept in balance so you get the rejoicing of seeing them again but allowing for the main character to evolve. The character development of Jin is expertly done and in a way that you can not help but feel hugely involved in her actions and dilemmas. The book also directly follows the predecessors story line which helps knot the two books together, something the first and second lacked a bit. The action and subterfuge is also of a high standard, well crafted and believable. The book is also very well balanced in that the character building and action is nicely entwined. In other words you do not have to wait long before the story amps up. It is a fitting end to the Cobra Trilogy however it left me wanting more. A great read!
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (3 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
Showing comments 1-2 of 2
© 2011 Baen Publishing Enterprises