A Thing of Eternity wrote:If you like it you like it, I haven't read any of his stuff, so can't comment on it.
Last summer I read a few chapters while home in the States and I've read the synopses on Wikipedia and various reviews online. The things that sound interesting are mostly pinched from other authors; the things that are original to Kevin are mostly silly. (The names of the Hydrogues and Faeros alone are enough to induce terminal tittering.)
I didn't realize until the other day that the name of the series comes from the unique astrophysical situation of the planet of the humans-in-funny-costumes-with-funny-sounding-names aliens, the Ildirans; according to Wikipedia:
Ildira - The Capital of the Ildiran Empire, heavily populated primarily due to the fear of isolation. Ildira is in a binary system, however its unusually close proximity to two other star systems, results in seven individual suns being clearly visible with a high degree of magnitude in the Ildiran sky, as a result the planet experiences no night.
Having evolved on such a planet, the Ildirans are evidently terrified of the dark. (OK, quick quiz: What Azimov short am I now thinking of?

)
Supposedly Kevin majored in physics or astrophysics, right? I wonder if he actually worked out the characteristics of the system to any degree. (Seriously...I doubt it.) As soon as I can get whatever data on the system he provides in the books, I'm going to run a simulation in Celestia and see whether it's really possible to have a planet where it would never get dark. If all the stars aren't close enough to share a barycenter (=be part of the same system), I suspect they'll be far enough away and appear small enough that the amount of light from them won't be that significant.
Verisimilitude: a prerequisite for discriminating readers.

"Let the dead give water to the dead. As for me, it's NO MORE FUCKING TEARS!"