The Honorverse is the semi-official name for the setting of a series of military science fiction stories by David Weber featuring Honor Harrington, the Nelsonesque heroine in a series reminiscent of C. S. Forester's Horatio Hornblower book series. The books are popular in the United States and new releases regularly make The New York Times Best Seller list.
The hypothesized FTL system is a richly detailed hyperspace mechanism, with some unique features such as the ability to "sail" along "gravity waves". One important feature of the hypothesized physics behind the tales is that there exist rare wormholes, by which properly equipped ships can travel virtually instantaneously between wormhole terminus points, vastly speeding interstellar travel along such routes. In practice, these are akin to choke point naval stations (fortified ports, cities, etcetera, in the Age of Sail in the Caribbean, around the horns of Africa and South America, or places in the Far East like India, Ceylon, The East Indies or places near strategic straits like many in today's Indonesia) or man-made routes such as the Panama and Suez canals. Possession of a wormhole provides the owner star nation an important revenue source from tariffs and increased trading opportunities relative to star nations without such access.
The analog to our world's extant nation states is the star nation, which in the case of central protagonist Honor Harrington is the Star Kingdom of Manticore. This is located in a binary star system that has three inhabited planets and the unique status of having not just one terminus of a wormhole junction, but six (to the stars: Sigma Draconis, Matapan, Gregor, Basilisk, Trevor's Star, and Phoenix) as of the events in the first book of the series On Basilisk Station. In the tenth novel of the series, War of Honor, a seventh terminus is discovered and explored and it is found to lead to a planetless M8 red dwarf near the inhabited Star named Lynx in the (so-called) Talbott Cluster. This became central to the first novel of a new sub-series, Shadow of Saganami, and in some of the short stories set after its discovery.
Since the wormhole junction termini links are so similar to "Age of Sail"-like trade routes, the Star Kingdom of Manticore has a very important role in interstellar trade and general commerce much out of proportion to its population or number of planets. Like the British Royal Navy in the days of the British Empire, the Royal Manticoran Navy has an important role in maintaining the security and integrity of the star nation's economy, and has been designed to do just that. The Star Kingdom's wealth and importance have evoked both envy and avarice and it has been and remains the object of much intrigue and friction on the part of other large powers in the Honorverse: examples include the Solarian League, the Republic of Haven, the Andermani Empire, Mesa and its corporate powers, and the large, chaotic collection of mostly individual star-polities known by the misnomer of the Silesian Confederacy, where pirates roam, and more or less everyone wants to do business, or conquer, or annex the mess.
There are some other interesting historical parallels to Earth's Age of Sail built into the Honorverse. It is set primarily after Honor's October 1, 3961 birth. Disruptive technological advances have been gradual in the Honorverse for most of the 500 years of the Star Kingdom of Manticore's existence, and as the series opens, that technological stagnation has led to a similar stagnation in both military strategy and tactics. The gravity impeller propulsion systems used in spaceships require "gun ports" in military vessels and captains strive to position their ships to maximize their fire power by using a broadside attack akin to the unturreted days dominated by the warships and ships of the line of the Age of Sail. Like Horatio Hornblower, Lord Nelson and Thomas Cochrane, Honor Stephanie Harrington is a superb ship handler bordering on genius.
Although most of the stories and books cast Honor in a starring role, more recent additions to the series include short stories and novels in which only passing references at most are made to her. In some cases this is because they are set before her birth; otherwise the featured characters have usually made appearances (if only brief ones) in Honor-centered stories.
| Honorverse Year (From) | Honorverse Year (To) | Story Title | Author | Source | Hardcover Release | Paperback Release |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ? | ? | "A Beautiful Friendship" | David Weber | More than Honor | N/A | January 1, 1998 |
| ? | ? | "The Stray" | Linda Evans | Worlds of Honor | February 1999 | March 1, 2000 |
| c. 1652 P.D. | c. 1652 P.D. | "What Price Dreams?" | David Weber | Worlds of Honor | February 1999 | March 1, 2000 |
| c. 1880 P.D. | ? | "Ms. Midshipwoman Harrington" | David Weber | Changer of Worlds | February 27, 2001 | January 29, 2002 |
| c. 1883 P.D. | c. 1883 P.D. | "Queen's Gambit" | Jane Lindskold | Worlds of Honor | February 1999 | March 1, 2000 |
| c. 1890 P.D. | c. 1890 P.D. | "The Hard Way Home" | David Weber | Worlds of Honor | February 1999 | March 1, 2000 |
| c. 1892 P.D. | c. 1892 P.D. | "Promised Land" | Jane Lindskold | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | Jun 29, 2004 |
| c. 1900 P.D. (March 3) | c. 1901 P.D. (January) | On Basilisk Station | David Weber | On Basilisk Station (novel) | October 1994 | February 1999 |
| ? | ? | "With One Stone" | Timothy Zahn | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | Jun 29, 2004 |
| c. 1903 P.D. (April) | c. 1903 P.D. (May) | The Honor of the Queen | David Weber | The Honor of the Queen (novel) | March 2000 | June 1993 |
| ? | ? | "A Ship Named Francis" | John Ringo & Victor Mitchell | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | June 29, 2004 |
| c. 1904 P.D. | c. 1905 P.D. (May) | The Short Victorious War | David Weber | The Short Victorious War (novel) | June 2002 | October 1994 |
| ? | ? | "A Grand Tour" | David Drake | More than Honor | N/A | January 1, 1998 |
| c. 1905 P.D. (June) | ? | Field of Dishonor | David Weber | Field of Dishonor (novel) | October 1999 | October 1994 |
| ? | ? | "Deck Load Strike" | Roland J. Green | Worlds of Honor | February 1999 | March 1, 2000 |
| ? | c. 1907 P.D. (August) | Flag in Exile | David Weber | Flag in Exile (novel) | March 2001 | September 1995 |
| c. 1908 P.D. (September) | c. 1910 P.D. (March) | Honor Among Enemies | David Weber | Honor Among Enemies (novel) | February 1999 | June 1 1997 |
| c. 1911 P.D. (July) | c. 1911 P.D. (July) | "A Whiff of Grapeshot" | S.M. Sterling | More than Honor | N/A | January 1, 1998 |
| ? | ? | Changer of Worlds | David Weber | Changer of Worlds | February 27, 2001 | January 29, 2002 |
| c. 1911 P.D. | c. 1911 P.D. (December) | In Enemy Hands | David Weber | In Enemy Hands (novel) | August 1997 | October 1, 1998 |
| c. 1912 P.D. (February) | c. 1913 P.D. (December) | Echoes of Honor | David Weber | Echoes of Honor (novel) | October 1998 | October 1999 |
| ? | ? | "Let's Go to Prague" | John Ringo | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | June 29, 2004 |
| ? | ? | "From the Highlands" | Eric Flint | Changer of Worlds | February 27, 2001 | January 29, 2002 |
| c. 1913 P.D. (December) | c. 1915 P.D. (May) | Ashes of Victory | David Weber | Ashes of Victory (novel) | March 1, 2000 | February 27, 2001 |
| c. 1914 P.D. (December) | c. 1914 P.D. (December) | "Nightfall" | David Weber | Changer of Worlds | February 27, 2001 | January 29, 2002 |
| c. 1915 P.D. (May) | c. 1915 P.D. (May) | "Fanatic" | Eric Flint | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | June 29, 2004 |
| c. 1918 P.D. (June) | c. 1918 P.D. (August) | "The Service of the Sword" | David Weber | The Service of the Sword | March 25, 2003 | June 29, 2004 |
| c. 1918 P.D. | c. 1920 P.D. | War of Honor | David Weber | War of Honor (novel) | August 31, 2002 | November 1, 2003 |
| ? | ? | Crown of Slaves | David Weber | Crown of Slaves (novel) | August 26, 2003 | March 29, 2005 |
| c. 1920 P.D. (June) | c. 1921 P.D. (July) | The Shadow of Saganami | David Weber | The Shadow of Saganami (novel) | October 26, 2004 | September 6, 2005 |
| c. 1920 P.D. (July) | c. 1921 P.D. (August) | At All Costs | David Weber | At All Costs (novel) | October 25, 2005 | September 25, 2007 |
| Main Honor Harrington series | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| HH0 | Ms. Midshipwoman Harrington | HH6 | Honor Among Enemies |
| HH1 | On Basilisk Station | HH7 | In Enemy Hands |
| HH2 | The Honor of the Queen | HH8 | Echoes of Honor |
| HH3 | The Short Victorious War | HH9 | Ashes of Victory |
| HH4 | Field of Dishonor | HH10 | War of Honor |
| HH5 | Flag in Exile | HH11 | At All Costs |
| Spin off Series | |||
| Wages of Sin | Saganami Island series | ||
| WS1 | Crown of Slaves | SI1 | The Shadow of Saganami |
| Anthologies | |||
| HHA1 | More Than Honor | HHA2 | Worlds of Honor |
| HHA3 | Changer of Worlds | HHA4 | Service of the Sword |