Anderson has written bestselling Star Wars and Star Trek books and  coauthored the expanded Dune series, so he's adept at handling big  settings and complicated plots. Now, he's created a space opera saga,  with the first three novels either published or about to be published.  This book, billed as a prequel to that series, pictures a situation rich  in tantalizing hints of intrigue. After an exhausted Earth launches a  swarm of spaceships in the desperate hope of finding new resources, the  explorers are rescued by humanoid and apparently benevolent aliens, who  divulge the secret of FTL (faster than light) travel and give humans the  chance to colonize uninhabited planets. Some of this book's episodes  take place aboard the spaceships or on different planets; they involve  human interaction with vegetable intelligence, ancient robots and beings  who live deep in the atmosphere of a giant gas planet. Other episodes  occur on Earth, where the leader is actually a pawn of the Hanseatic  League's unscrupulous chairman. There are many possibilities waiting to  be developedâ€"perhaps too many to do justice to in this relatively  short comic. As it is, Anderson's script feels more like the rushed  synopsis of a story than the story itself. The book stands out, however,  for its superlative art. Teranishi's rendering of characters, machines  and alien planets is stunning, but Fouts-Broome deserves special credit  for her wonderful coloring. The drawings flex and glow on the page, like  a mixture of Frank Frazetta and Maxfield Parrish, providing the  freshness and wonder that the sketchy script doesn't. 
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