“DiLouie flavors Kipling’s “The Man Who Would Be King” with a dash of Joe Haldeman’s THE FOREVER WAR to create this rollicking military SF farce. Lawrence Dobbs and Timothy Muldoon are long-service NCOs in the Colonial Marines—very long service, over 800 years. They’re the kind of men who can conquer a planet all by themselves, but times have changed, and it’s just not the same Federation they signed up for. When they hear of a world where the natives have discovered the secret alchemical formula for gold, they gather up a team and make plans to rob the place blind. DiLouie spices up Dobbs and Muldoon’s adventures with loony ideas, from a computer virus that plays dice games with fate to a doomsday machine containing the maniacal consciousness of the last emperor of planet Xerxes. Fans of humorous science fiction will find plenty to enjoy in this time-traveling, galaxy-crossing romp.”
-PUBLISHER’S WEEKLY, April 2008
“Who’s to say they can’t? Adventurers Dobbs and Muldoon have a get rich quick scheme that they are sure will work—robbing an entire planet. THE GREAT PLANET ROBBERY is author Craig DiLouie’s third novel alongside his dozens of other prolific accomplishments tells the story of two friends following an old map to a planet that is supposedly rich with gold–and maybe far more than that. No one had ever said it would be easy for them, as there are those who would protest to the pillaging of their home world. THE GREAT PLANET ROBBERY is highly recommended to science fiction fans everywhere and deserves a place on community library sci-fi shelves.”
-MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW, May 2008
“This is a fun-filled, hard to put down novel which is both a riff and an homage to classic pulp adventure SF … There are so many hilarious moments that punctuate the dry, ironical, matter-of-fact narration that is hard to stop laughing quite often. The above sounds like ’50s pulp reinvented for our times—as people write once in a while, though SF moved beyond that a long time ago. However THE GREAT PLANET ROBBERY is actually a very self-ironic, post modernistic tale told through all the pulp cliches you want. This is what I would call ‘picaresque SF’ more than anything else, though with full modern sensibilities beneath the pulp-like content … The ending is superb, quite funny and in the spirit of the book. If you want a fun romp that also challenges the adventure-SF tropes, this is the book for you …”
-Liviu, full review here