Halo: Mortal Dictata: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 09:09, January 24, 2014
This article is about the novel. For the legislation, see UN Colonial Mortal Dictata.
Halo: Mortal Dictata | |
---|---|
Attribution information | |
Author(s): |
Karen Traviss |
Publication information | |
Publisher: |
|
Publication date: |
|
Media type: |
Print (paperback, hardcover); audiobook |
Pages: |
496 pages |
ISBN: |
|
Halo: Mortal Dictata is the third and last novel in the Kilo-Five Trilogy by Karen Traviss, and a direct follow-up to Halo: The Thursday War. The book was released on January 21, 2014.[2][1]
Official summary
Characters
Note: all subjects are listed tentatively based on material released so far. As such, the nature of the listed appearances does not reflect the complete novel; i.e. certain subjects which are "mentioned only" may actually appear in the full novel .
Humans
- Alkmini Leandro (First appearance)
- Pinar Çelik (First appearance)
- Andrew Remo Template:First mentioned
- Arthur Remo Template:First mentioned
- Catherine Halsey (Mentioned only)
- Damien Hogarth (Mentioned only)
- Edvin Sentzke (First appearance)
- Evan Phillips
- Franklin Mendez (Mentioned only)
- Graham Alban (First appearance)
- Hedda Sentzke (First appearance)
- Jakob (First appearance)
- Janey Sentzke (First appearance)
- John-117 (Mentioned only)
- Kerstin Sentzke (First appearance)
- Laura Sentzke Template:First mentioned
- Lena Sentzke (First appearance)
- Lian Devereaux
- Malcolm Geffen
- Margaret Parangosky
- Mike Spenser
- Nairn (First appearance)
- Naomi-010
- Peter Moritz
- Saul
- Serin Osman
- Staffan Sentzke
- Vasily Beloi
Kig-Yar
- Ais (First appearance)
- Bakz (First appearance)
- Chol Von (First appearance)
- Eith Mor (First appearance)
- Gon (First appearance)
- Hiiq (First appearance)
- Huz (First appearance)
- Jec (First appearance)
- Kij (First appearance)
- Laik (First appearance)
- Lig (First appearance)
- Noit (First appearance)
- Nulm (First appearance)
- Ril (First appearance)
- Sav Fel
- Skal (First appearance)
- Ved (First appearance)
- Vek (First appearance)
- Zim (First appearance)
Sangheili
- Avu Med 'Telcam
- Dural 'Mdama (Mentioned only)
- Jul 'Mdama (Mentioned only)
- Raia 'Mdama (Mentioned only)
- Thel 'Vadam (Mentioned only)
Huragok
- Leaks Repaired
- Prone to Drift (Mentioned only)
- Requires Adjustment
- Sometimes Sinks (First appearance)
Artificial intelligence
Trivia
- The name of the novel is a reference to the UN Colonial Mortal Dictata, a piece of legislation associated with the ethics of medical science. Dr. Catherine Halsey broke the Dictata on several occasions, namely when flash cloning a functioning human brain.[3]
- The cover art depicts a young Naomi-010 looking at a Mark V(B) helmet, foreshadowing her induction into the SPARTAN-II program. However, the Mark V (B) was issued only to Spartans of the UNSC Army's SPECWAR Group Three. This may reflect her armor's stated resemblance to the first-generation Mark V, though the cover art for Halo: The Thursday War shows her armor as blue, not gray.
- An online excerpt of the novel's prologue was released at Tor.com on July 17, 2013.[4] A preview consisting of the novel's first chapter and the audiobook's second chapter was released at HaloWaypoint.com on January 16, 2014.[5] The second chapter was released online at Tor.com on January 17, 2014.[6]
Sources
- ^ a b Amazon - Halo: Mortal Dictata
- ^ Tor.com: The Halo Kilo-Five Trilogy Will Conclude This January
- ^ Dr. Halsey's personal journal, May 21, 2549
- ^ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedexcerpt
- ^ Halo Waypoint - Exclusive Halo: Mortal Dictata Prologue and Chapter One Excerpt
- ^ Tor.com: Halo: Mortal Dictata (Excerpt 2)