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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Empires: Extraction
|author=Gavin Deas
|publisher=Gollancz
|date=November 2014
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>057512900X</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>057512900X</amazonus>
|website=
|video=
|summary=You may be sitting comfortably in your seat, but we are not alone. Not only do we have to contend with one aggressive alien race, but three of them. Rees is one of a chosen few who know what is going on, but it appears there is little he can do about it. Join him in this mixture of intelligent and military science fiction.
|cover=057512900X
|aznuk=057512900X
|aznus=057512900X
}}
I will take my hat off to any author or authors who partake of experimental fiction; trying to do something a little differently to push new ground. However, I will jam that hat right back onto my head if said book forgoes the basic need to entertain in preference of being something 'Meaningful'. Gavin Deas, a combination of authors Gavin Smith and Stephen Deas, have tried to do something different, but does it work?
It is an inherent problem in invasion fiction that the hero rarely knows what on Earth is happening off Earth. However, more than in most cases ''Extraction'' also does not inform the reader. We learn that there are alien races other than the Weft, but only capture glimpses of them. It is a deliberate ploy by co-authors Smith and Deas to make both books in the series synchronous, therefore you are never going to know what is truly happening until you have read both.
This is all well and good, but for the first half of ''Extraction,'' you are left as confused as the human characters. What is going on? It is not helped that the two types of genre are so opposed; intelligence one minute, mindless the next. I also found the liberal use of extreme adult language a little much at times. If I am meant to believe that sentient beings are floating in space, I am perfectly capable of suspending my disbelief when it comes to the vocabulary of soldiers.
Although, I had issues with ''Extraction'' there is one major scene in the book that is excellent. Once the action kicks in there is some brilliantly realised military science fiction on offer. I fear that many people may struggle to reach this far into the book. The Weft themselves are not that easy to relate to; they lack similar emotions to humans. This artificial intelligence way of acting makes more sense after reading ''Infiltration'' as The Pleasure are a far more Man-like race.
As I embarked on reading the sister novel, ''Empires: Infiltration'', I wondered if all the gaps that were in ''Extraction'' would be filled? I have already found that the second book flows slightly better as I am aware of what is coming up. It is certain that both books should be read one after the other to get a true understanding of what Smith and Deas are trying to do, but for this to work both books need to stand on their own. At times ''Extraction'' does not and it is only the excellent action sequences that stop it being below average. [[Empires: Infiltration by Gavin Deas|Empires: Infiltration]] is a little better.
More epic science fiction can be found in [[The Dark Between the Stars by Kevin J Anderson]], but for something that is actually fun try [[Lock In by John Scalzi]] instead.