Coyote Frontier (Coyote Trilogy)
Coyote Frontier (Coyote Trilogy) book cover

Coyote Frontier (Coyote Trilogy)

Mass Market Paperback – Illustrated, November 28, 2006

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Ace
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0441013579
Dimensions
4.3 x 1 x 6.7 inches
Weight
6.7 ounces

Description

Review “The best space colonization saga to come along in decades.”— Rocky Mountain News “A rich blend of personal and political storytelling.”— Entertainment Weekly “With echoes of the work of Gordon Dickson and Clifford Simak, Steele offers myriad kinds of thrills.”— Science Fiction Weekly “Steele does not disappoint…he expresses deep concern for the directions—political, ideological, economic, and environmental—in which we are moving today.”— Analog “Allen Steele is at his best with this deep moral yet action-packed character driven science fiction thriller.”— Baryon “Has an even more Heinleinish flavor than does either Coyote or Coyote Rising .”— Booklist About the Author Allen Steele was a journalist who covered the space program. He later turned to fiction writing, and his first novel, Orbital Decay , published by Ace Books, was chosen as the best first novel of the year by Locus . Allen himself went on to be nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. He began writing and selling to the science fiction magazines and is a three-time Hugo Award winner for his short fiction. In 2013, he received the Robert A. Heinlein Award for outstanding published works in science fiction.

Features & Highlights

  • The saga of Earth’s first space colonists continues as the Hugo Award-winning author of
  • Coyote
  • and
  • Coyote Rising
  • presents a riveting novel of their struggle to create a new civilization light-years away from the world—and the problems they thought they left behind…

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(128)
★★★★
25%
(53)
★★★
15%
(32)
★★
7%
(15)
-7%
(-15)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Best Coyote Tale Yet

After having revolted against an unjust occupation of Coyote by the Western Hemisphere Union in the previous novel, Coyote Rising, the colonists on Coyote face a new challenge in Coyote Frontier. Via the starbridge -- an orbital device allowing virtually instantaneous travel through hyperspace between Coyote and Earth -- Earth is once again playing a direct role in the fate of those on Coyote. This time, however, the European Alliance, knowing how the WHU's occupation wound up, insists that they want a peaceful, mutually beneficial trading relationship between the two worlds. But...nothing ever comes easy, and the president of the Coyote Federation Carlos Montero and his wife, Wendy Gunther, must navigate a diplomatic minefield to not only ensure fair trade agreements with the nations and coalitions of Earth, but must also see to it that the Coyote Federation is recognized as a sovereign entity by a world (Earth) that is ravenous for its natural resources and virgin real estate.

As Coyote's diplomatic relationship with Earth begins to take shape, other events on Coyote are threatening the Chirreep...the sentient, pre-technological, simian-like natives that have a propensity for kleptomania. With the full-scale harvesting of the forests on Coyote, the Chirreep's habitat is being critically threatened. Some of the colonists take issue with this and attempt to take matters into their own hands.....

Coyote Frontier is easily the best of the first three Coyote novels. It is fast-paced...with few dull moments to drag the story down. Also, the idea of the starbridge, while far from unique, is used as an effective plot mechanism to bring the now disparate cultures of Coyote and Earth into contact.

While I believe that the author originally planned for this tale to be the final one in the Coyote story...I am glad this has wound up to not be the case and I am looking forward to picking up further stories in the Coyote universe in the future.
3 people found this helpful
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Renewed Contact With Earth

Coyote Frontier (2005) is the third SF novel in the Coyote Trilogy, following [[ASIN:1841493686 Coyote Rising]]. In the previous novel, the original colonists revolted against invaders from the Western Hemisphere Union. Once the WHU troops were defeated, they were sent back to Earth and the new colonists were incorporated into the Coyote Federation.

In this novel, Jonas Whittaker is the man who creates the starbridge, a system that generates a wormhole between linked toruses. He had been slated to flee the Solar System on the URSS Alabama, but unluckily had been captured by the police. Yet he was placed in biostasis for two centuries and outlived his government.

Anastasia Tereshkova is the Captain of the second starship commissioned by the European Alliance. The EASS Columbus is taking a starbridge to 47 Ursae Majoris-B. Actually, the ship itself will become the starbridge and the Gatehouse.

Jonathan Parson is the Second Officer of the Columbus. He is an exemplary officer. But he has no desire to return to Earth.

Carlos Montero is President of the Coyote Federation. He had been the first longrange explorer on the planet. While only seventeen, he had traveled around the world on the Great Equatorial River. Later, he became a leader in the revolt against the WHU.

Wendy Gunther is the wife of Carlos and a former member of the Federation Council. She is a better statesman than her husband, having practically cut her teeth on colonial politics. Carlos greatly depends on her political advice.

Susan Montero is the daughter of Carlos and Wendy. She is a naturalist at the university. When she is not teaching classes, Susan spends most of her time studying the natives.

Hawk Thompson is a nephew of Carlos. He is the son of Lars Thompson and Marie Montero. His loyalties are divided between his mother and his estranged father.

Manuel Castro is a savant, a downloaded mind within a robotic body. He had come to Coyote in the retinue of the WHU dictator and was even appointed Lieutenant Governor. Since the revolt, he disappeared into the mountains, where he studies the natives.

Katoom is a Chirreep, a native of Coyote. Carlos had discovered that the sandthieves on Barren Island were intelligent natives many years ago, but kept this information secret. Katoom is even more highly evolved than the sandthieves.

In this story, the EA discovers the body of Jonas on Luna and takes him back to Europe to revive him. Jonas brings with him all his notes on the dimetric drive and the starbridge. His subsequent research creates an improved version of the drive. And the discoveries of the past two centuries make feasible the construction of a working starbridge.

The prototype starbridge -- KX-1 -- is used to take the first European starship -- the EASS Galileo -- to the Kuiper Belt as the first step of a very secret mission. An improved version is built into the EASS Columbus and taken to the Ursae Majoris-B system. There the Columbus is reassembled into the starbridge and a link is established with the starbridge near the Earth.

Carlos and Wendy greet Captain Terekhova at her first landing on Coyote. Both parties are rather surprised at the changes that have occurred. Ana shares some information with the Coyote colonists, but is hesitant to tell about the EASS Galileo.

Jon Parson pilots the shuttle that takes Ana down to the surface, but he soon takes a hike. He receives assistance from a few colonists in his journey into the boondocks. He just doesn't want to go back to the dying Earth.

Eventually Jon becomes an assistant of Manny Castro. Parson soon meets Katoom and other natives. Then he encounters Susan and Hawk.

The coming of the starbridge becomes a political issue on Coyote. Some people think that it will allow the Earth to inundate Coyote with new colonists. After all, transit time within the starbridge itself is effectually zero.

This tale relates the effects of this astronautical shortcut on the Coyote Federation. After treaties are signed with various Earth governments -- and one private capitalist -- Susan notices that the environmental damage is increasing rapidly. Moreover, the habitats of the natives are also being destroyed.

The story covers a time period from shortly after the hijacking of the URSS Alabama to the confrontation between the Coyote Federation and the European Union. Almost every page is filled with action and conflict between individuals and polities. Read and enjoy!

Recommended for Steele fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of interstellar conflict, planetary colonization, and interpersonal relations.

-Arthur W. Jordin
3 people found this helpful
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One of Steele's best

I have enjoyed all of Allen Steele's books. Some people I know think that I'm weird for reading books like his but, what can I say except I LOVE THEM. The stories are well written and very interesting.
1 people found this helpful
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Good gift for grandson

My high-school grandson has been reading this series and was very happy to receive this book as a gift.
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Good read

Husband loves this book- good book
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I am glad I found Steele as a science fiction author

I am glad I found Steele as a science fiction author, good story lines, good character development, and imaginative plot lines. Worth the read.
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coyote is an excellent series

This IS A Surprisingly Interesting Series. Excellent Character Development, Logical PLot, And A Few Tasty Twists And Turns. Read It.
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Cowboys In Space? It's A Far Cry From Heinlein, But It's Not All Bad.

The Coyote novels (this is book # 3 in a series) are nominally included in the Science Fiction genre, because they concern the exploration and settlement of an alien planet. But once they land the spacefarers are strangely quick to opt for 19th-century technologies, all the way down to spontaneously domesticating local fauna for use as beasts-of-burden. As a result, these books are basically just Westerns set on another planet. Later the series becomes more concerned with the colonists' fight to preserve their freedoms as various outside authorities - governmental, religious, and corporate - attempt to impose themselves upon the fledgling frontier society.

The writing is of a level normally reserved for the Young Adult category, with simple word choice and sentence structures throughout. Narrative details are repeated over and over again to the point of tedium, and the characters are all well-worn stereotypes who behave exactly according to the playbook. The incorporation of Steele's sociopolitical sentiments is heavy-handed to the point of being pedantic as well. (Socialism Bad! Religious Zealotry Bad! Effete Corporate Bureaucrats... BAD! Rugged-Yet-Sensitive Frontiersman? Goooooooood.)

Still, the Coyote books are fast-paced and entertaining, and Steele does a good job with his descriptions of frontier life. Many of the conflicts are man-vs.-nature stories of people just trying to survive, which is a nice change in a genre overfull with epic battles between fleets of alien starships. He also successfully juggles an enormous, intergenerational cast of characters, and while none of them is especially original or well-developed, they're all likeable people and I found myself genuinely rooting for them by the end of each book.

So, if the idea of a cowboy adventure set on another planet appeals to you, and if you don't expect your leisure-reading to qualify as literature, the Coyote books are worth a try. They probably won't give you much to think about, but they're decent entertainment for long flight or a lazy afternoon.
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A Great Conclusion to the First Trilogy

Award-winning author Allen Steele brings his Coyote Trilogy to a close with Coyote Frontier. While this is not the end of the Coyote saga for Steele or his readers by any means, it nevertheless represents a closure to the in-depth development of the world of Coyote through its colonists, and the opening of a new chapter in this series.

As Coyote seems to be settling down somewhat with a stable form of government any would-be Social Collectivists from Earth having been sent packing, it seems like the colonists and now natives (who have been born there) of Coyote are getting by, only there aren't many natural resources to offer, as people struggle to maintain what is essentially a medieval level of society. The only real solution to this is to seek some help from Earth through trade and diplomacy to important some of these necessary resources for the improvement of society for the Coyote colonists.

Meanwhile, back on Earth, things are pretty much going to hell, as humanity is doing its best to destroy the planet, but science has been pushed forward with the development of faster than light (FTL) travel and what are known as "star bridges" that allow spaceships to travel vast distances of space in an incredibly short time. A star bridge is soon built near Coyote, with another located in our solar system, and a diplomatic group from Coyote is sent to Earth to possibly create some trade agreements with various nations of Earth. But humans will be humans, and many greedily seek the land and possibility of Coyote, looking to harvest it for personal gain. Fortunately, the leader of this diplomatic group, the all too familiar Carlos Montero from the previous books, thinks he knows when to draw the line; only he's not too sure about one Morgan Goldstein, who is one of the richest men on Earth, looking to improve the lives of everyone on Coyote, but also make a hefty profit.

Steele does what he did best with his previous two Coyote books, hooking the reader in with some incredible stories of Coyote and what its colonists are trying to do. Now he brings the question of the cost of land and the effects these colonists are starting to have on the ecosystems and native species of the planet, as well as using up what little resources it has. These are warning bells that any reader is already very familiar with, with what we're doing with our own planet, which simply provide for some riveting reading, along with a high point of a finish and a big surprise that sets up for some very interesting future books in this ongoing saga.

Originally written on August 17, 2011 ©Alex C. Telander.

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Weakest of the Three

Steele's third trip to Coyote is by far the least satisfying.

In a nutshell, the series started with a group of colonists hijacking a spacecraft to escape an oppressive regime on Earth. The first book dealt with the colonist's struggle to begin a new life on Coyote, a planet light-years from Earth. The second book detailed their struggles against militant invaders from their home planet.

As with the previous books, Steele jumps from one POV character to another as Earth again makes contact with Coyote and sets up a wormhole-like transportation system which allows near-instantaneous travel between the two planets. While Earth is dying, Coyote is prospering but in desperate need of new technology unavailable to their colonial environs. It appears that both planets need each other. So now the story boils down to what coyote's Earth cousins want, and what they will do to get it. Paralleling the main plot, is an environmental battle over the Coyote aboriginals which converges into the main story.

Overall, not poorly done, but I still felt it lacked something the previous two books had. A big disappointment was the ending, which had the feeling of being thrown together and, I thought, detracted from the book as a whole. Plus, Steele's oh-so-indelicate political jabs, I felt, crossed the line. I have nothing wrong with socio/political commentary but long for the days when authors used a scalpel rather than a sledgehammer to express it.

Despite my grievances with the book, I can't NOT recommend this book - it wasn't really bad and it did provide closure (of sorts) to the story. But it definitely is the weakest of the three.