

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.Rex, Honey, Dragon and Bees are weaponised, genetically modified animals controlled by their Master. 'This is superior stuff, tackling big themes - gods, messiahs, artificial intelligence, alienness - with brio' Financial Times. Entertaining, smart, surprising and unexpectedly human' Patrick Ness. I promise you'll never see dogs in the same way again' The Roaring Bookworm. 'A pretty stellar work of speculative fiction. With Dogs of War, Adrian Tchaikovsky has managed the near impossible and delivered both masterfully' The Eloquent Page. My higher self is looking for a plot that forces me to engage my brain and think. 'When it comes to science fiction, my primitive brain always craves action and pretty explosions. 'Thoughtful and emotionally affecting, yet also exciting and unpredictable' SFX 5* review.

Speculative fiction at its best' Starburst magazine. 'Tchaikovsky is a phenomenal author, a modern powerhouse of fiction. 'A timely warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence and super weapons in the hands of unscrupulous powers' Guardian. This book is great, read it' Just a Guy Who Likes to Read. 'A novel which takes war and broadens the concept to include peacetime ramifications of this new frontier technology through sociopolitical commentary which in turn gives the characters and theme a 360 feel delivered through a multi POV narrative. The work of an author on the very top of his game' Boney Abroad. 'The nuance of the story could easily have been lost in imagery of massive animals running impossible missions, but Tchaikovsky is a skilled navigator and guides us deftly along to a very satisfying conclusion.

Tchaikovsky demonstrates, yet again, that he is an excellent storyteller whether in fantasy of science fiction' Concatenation.

'A chilling portrayal of the future, humanised, ironically, by the lovability of the primary character, Rex.
