Death's Head
From Publishers Weekly
First-time novelist Gunn, a Brit who's served his country by undertaking mysterious military or espionage "assignments," delivers a hilarious far-future shoot-'em-up featuring a flawless antihero. As Sven Tveskoeg survives one certain death after another, he reveals himself to be a supernaturally quick healer, able to communicate telepathically with aliens, honorable and compassionate in the face of terrible consequences and equally capable of masterminding a prison planet rebellion, the invasion of a city and the assassination of cyborg generals. Fortunately for Gunn (and Sven), readers are much more likely to cackle with glee than to point and snicker. Some may accuse Gunn of autobiographical wish-fulfillment that would make a fan-fic author blush, and Sven's adventures read almost like a novelization of a movie or video game. Those looking for hard-bitten military SF will be disappointed. Those who love schlock that stops just short of parody will be delighted. (May)
I saw this sitting on my dad's shelf when we were up for Memorial Weekend. He said the 3 book series kicked much ass, but from what I've read so far, the review above doesn't seem like the book I'm reading.
'Hilarious'. Not really - not in the Harry Harrison sci fi spy sense. Sven is a Legionnaire, a grunt killer, and a man with a robotic arm who knows his place in the hierarchy of the military. 'Death's Head' are like special forces officers, given ridiculously outlandish rewards because these are some seriously fucked up individuals. Plus they earn it. Legion men - they're cannon fodder.
So far I'm enjoying the book, but it's definitely not your 'pg13' sci fi book I've been reading the past 10-15 years. Different mindset altogether - a lowly, but efficient soldier's point of view. Unrefined and cold. I dig it.