Amazon.com: Customer reviews: The Lost Fleet: Dauntless
Skip to main content
.us
Hello Select your address
All
Select the department you want to search in
Hello, Sign in
Account & Lists
Returns & Orders
Cart
All
Disability Customer Support Best Sellers Amazon Basics Customer Service New Releases Prime Today's Deals Music Books Amazon Home Registry Fashion Kindle Books Gift Cards Toys & Games Automotive Sell Shopper Toolkit Pet Supplies Computers Pharmacy Coupons Home Improvement Beauty & Personal Care Video Games Luxury Stores Smart Home Health & Household Handmade Audible
Gear up for spring outdoors

  • The Lost Fleet: Dauntless
  • ›
  • Customer reviews

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
1,516 global ratings
5 star
63%
4 star
25%
3 star
8%
2 star
3%
1 star
1%
The Lost Fleet: Dauntless

The Lost Fleet: Dauntless

byJack Campbell
Write a review
How customer reviews and ratings work

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon
See All Buying Options

Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Mal Warwick
TOP 500 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 starsFull of ideas you won't find in other military science fiction
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2020
Military science fiction doesn’t often rock my boat. Of course, there are exceptions, such as Joe Haldeman’s classic, The Forever War. But that novel didn’t work so brilliantly because it celebrated the military life. No, it was exciting because it highlighted the impact of relativity on travel at great distances through space and time. And that’s one of the principal attractions as well of Jack Campbell‘s The Lost Fleet: Dauntless, although in a very different way. The novel is the first in Campbell’s popular military SF series about a human fleet at war across the galaxy.

If you’re a fan of military science fiction, you’re likely to enjoy this book (and probably its sequels in the Lost Fleet series, too). But, for me, three reasons stood out.

Strategy vs. tactics
Captain John (“Black Jack”) Geary finds on awakening after a century in cryonic suspension that the men and women in the Terran military fleet are not just young and inexperienced. Because so of them have been dying at the hands of their enemy, and they’ve been rushed into service to replace those lost, they’ve never been trained in military strategy and tactics. Geary quickly finds after he is assigned to take command of the fleet that his greatest battle is not with the enemy Syndics but with the ignorance of the people he’s forced to manage. Although Campbell doesn’t clearly label what they do as tactics and what Geary does as strategy, anyone even cursorily familiar with the field will know that’s exactly what the contrast is all about. And that’s a fundamental lesson to convey in this launch of a military SF series.

The distortion of perception at relativistic speeds
It’s typical in space opera such as Star Wars to show great, fast-moving spaceships zooming in and around one another and shooting each other to smithereens. Well, not so fast. As Campbell makes clear in The Lost Fleet, warships moving at relativistic speeds, sometimes exceeding “.2 lightspeed,” or about 37,000 miles per second, would be entirely incapable of observing one another because of the perceptual distortion caused in time-space. Instead, they, and in this case Captain Geary, must extrapolate using complex algorithms where the enemy is likely to be minutes or hours later. And that assumes the enemy hasn’t shifted course even slightly while traveling at such a high speed, since doing so might place them in an entirely different sector of a star system. So, it turns out that war in space is much more like four-dimensional chess than three.

How to fight a war in four dimensions
Campbell explains, “At point one light, we can still figure out what we’re looking at with some accuracy. As we get closer to the speed of light, it gets harder to tell where everything really is . . . It requires a special kind of training and experience with judging exactly when to transmit orders to forces deployed across light-minutes of space, when to have those orders take effect, how to compensate for the small, but real, relativistic distortions that can creep into coordinated time lines, how to estimate what the enemy must be doing based on time-late visual images that vary depending on which part of the enemy formation you’re looking at. . . Think of it as a ballet in four dimensions, with the different parts staggered through different layers of time delays in seeing and communicating with them.”

Imaginative new weapons in the military SF series
In most fictional accounts of war in space (and I would certainly hope all such accounts are fictional), the weaponry used is little different from the “rayguns” of the bad old days of classic science fiction. Not so with Campbell. Several imaginative new weapons systems debut in The Lost Fleet, including one labeled (with historical resonance) grapeshot. This weapon hurls small steel balls at enormous speed at enemy warships, opening up holes in their hulls. In hindsight, given the fear among astronauts of penetration by micrometeorites, a weapon of this sort is a no-brainer. But this is where I’ve first come across it. And Campbell introduces other unorthodox weapons systems in this always interesting novel.

About the author
John G. Hemry, who writes under the pseudonym Jack Campbell as well as his own name, is a retired US Naval officer. In addition to the six novels in The Lost Fleet series and the five Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier books, he has written twenty-five other science fiction novels, three anthologies, and a slew of short stories.
Read more
10 people found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Jeff
3.0 out of 5 starsShort Review on entire series, and followup series.
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2014
After reading this entire series, and everything except the last as yet unfinished final book of Beyond the frontier continuation of this series, I feel 3 stars is correct.

The book is a good space Opera. scifi military adventure. The story is fun, and original enough to be worth reading. It is good enough that despite it's shortcomings I bought every book and read them in a week. (I am retired I have the time).

Let me explain the main shortfall of this series and why it is 3 stars however. Like a lot of series it restates things that are already known to remind people whats going on in-case they forgot between one book and the next. This book however takes it to a new extreme. Here is a few examples.

1. Every battle the author re-explains often in agonizing detail how space battles in his universe take place. (several times within the same book, every book in the series)

2. Every time the main character jumps into a new star system and maneuvers the author re-explains how they judge distance, and relation in space of the fleet. ( not just once per book to catch people up who may have forgot... but a annoyingly large amount of times. )

3. I am not black jack --- Get used to this he will whine about it for the next 9 books. Think he finally found resolution and accepted who he is after a book? WRONG he will whine about it again in the next book and resolve it again, and again, and again.

4. You will skip over the sections of banter between him and his love interest in later books. It is tired and dry, and essentially they have the same conversation over and over. See number 3.

5. Last a summary. This series is 50% re-explaining what already happened or has been explained, 50% new content. I did a word search... Entire paragraphs are literally copied from one book to the next.

Despite it's flaws it is entertaining to read. However It will never be your favorite series or sci-fi universe.
Read more
151 people found this helpful

Search
Sort by
Top reviews
Filter by
All reviewers
All stars
Text, image, video
1,516 global ratings | 845 global reviews

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.

From the United States

Jeff
3.0 out of 5 stars Short Review on entire series, and followup series.
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2014
Verified Purchase
After reading this entire series, and everything except the last as yet unfinished final book of Beyond the frontier continuation of this series, I feel 3 stars is correct.

The book is a good space Opera. scifi military adventure. The story is fun, and original enough to be worth reading. It is good enough that despite it's shortcomings I bought every book and read them in a week. (I am retired I have the time).

Let me explain the main shortfall of this series and why it is 3 stars however. Like a lot of series it restates things that are already known to remind people whats going on in-case they forgot between one book and the next. This book however takes it to a new extreme. Here is a few examples.

1. Every battle the author re-explains often in agonizing detail how space battles in his universe take place. (several times within the same book, every book in the series)

2. Every time the main character jumps into a new star system and maneuvers the author re-explains how they judge distance, and relation in space of the fleet. ( not just once per book to catch people up who may have forgot... but a annoyingly large amount of times. )

3. I am not black jack --- Get used to this he will whine about it for the next 9 books. Think he finally found resolution and accepted who he is after a book? WRONG he will whine about it again in the next book and resolve it again, and again, and again.

4. You will skip over the sections of banter between him and his love interest in later books. It is tired and dry, and essentially they have the same conversation over and over. See number 3.

5. Last a summary. This series is 50% re-explaining what already happened or has been explained, 50% new content. I did a word search... Entire paragraphs are literally copied from one book to the next.

Despite it's flaws it is entertaining to read. However It will never be your favorite series or sci-fi universe.
151 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Mal Warwick
TOP 500 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Full of ideas you won't find in other military science fiction
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2020
Verified Purchase
Military science fiction doesn’t often rock my boat. Of course, there are exceptions, such as Joe Haldeman’s classic, The Forever War. But that novel didn’t work so brilliantly because it celebrated the military life. No, it was exciting because it highlighted the impact of relativity on travel at great distances through space and time. And that’s one of the principal attractions as well of Jack Campbell‘s The Lost Fleet: Dauntless, although in a very different way. The novel is the first in Campbell’s popular military SF series about a human fleet at war across the galaxy.

If you’re a fan of military science fiction, you’re likely to enjoy this book (and probably its sequels in the Lost Fleet series, too). But, for me, three reasons stood out.

Strategy vs. tactics
Captain John (“Black Jack”) Geary finds on awakening after a century in cryonic suspension that the men and women in the Terran military fleet are not just young and inexperienced. Because so of them have been dying at the hands of their enemy, and they’ve been rushed into service to replace those lost, they’ve never been trained in military strategy and tactics. Geary quickly finds after he is assigned to take command of the fleet that his greatest battle is not with the enemy Syndics but with the ignorance of the people he’s forced to manage. Although Campbell doesn’t clearly label what they do as tactics and what Geary does as strategy, anyone even cursorily familiar with the field will know that’s exactly what the contrast is all about. And that’s a fundamental lesson to convey in this launch of a military SF series.

The distortion of perception at relativistic speeds
It’s typical in space opera such as Star Wars to show great, fast-moving spaceships zooming in and around one another and shooting each other to smithereens. Well, not so fast. As Campbell makes clear in The Lost Fleet, warships moving at relativistic speeds, sometimes exceeding “.2 lightspeed,” or about 37,000 miles per second, would be entirely incapable of observing one another because of the perceptual distortion caused in time-space. Instead, they, and in this case Captain Geary, must extrapolate using complex algorithms where the enemy is likely to be minutes or hours later. And that assumes the enemy hasn’t shifted course even slightly while traveling at such a high speed, since doing so might place them in an entirely different sector of a star system. So, it turns out that war in space is much more like four-dimensional chess than three.

How to fight a war in four dimensions
Campbell explains, “At point one light, we can still figure out what we’re looking at with some accuracy. As we get closer to the speed of light, it gets harder to tell where everything really is . . . It requires a special kind of training and experience with judging exactly when to transmit orders to forces deployed across light-minutes of space, when to have those orders take effect, how to compensate for the small, but real, relativistic distortions that can creep into coordinated time lines, how to estimate what the enemy must be doing based on time-late visual images that vary depending on which part of the enemy formation you’re looking at. . . Think of it as a ballet in four dimensions, with the different parts staggered through different layers of time delays in seeing and communicating with them.”

Imaginative new weapons in the military SF series
In most fictional accounts of war in space (and I would certainly hope all such accounts are fictional), the weaponry used is little different from the “rayguns” of the bad old days of classic science fiction. Not so with Campbell. Several imaginative new weapons systems debut in The Lost Fleet, including one labeled (with historical resonance) grapeshot. This weapon hurls small steel balls at enormous speed at enemy warships, opening up holes in their hulls. In hindsight, given the fear among astronauts of penetration by micrometeorites, a weapon of this sort is a no-brainer. But this is where I’ve first come across it. And Campbell introduces other unorthodox weapons systems in this always interesting novel.

About the author
John G. Hemry, who writes under the pseudonym Jack Campbell as well as his own name, is a retired US Naval officer. In addition to the six novels in The Lost Fleet series and the five Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier books, he has written twenty-five other science fiction novels, three anthologies, and a slew of short stories.
10 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


C.T. Top Contributor: Star Trek
4.0 out of 5 stars Competence porn in Space!
Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2018
Verified Purchase
4/5

Speaking as an author of space opera fiction, I'm always on the lookout for new or classic fiction in the genre to read. Mind you, I'm one of those lumps who originally had his exposure limited to Star Trek and Star Wars. I've always thought of it as a visual medium so while I love Babylon Five, Battlestar Galactica, Mass Effect, and Halo--I never quite got into the literary side of things. Well, you know, until I decided to write it myself.

David Weber, Lois McMaster Bujold, Larry Niven, and a few other wonderful authors have broadened my horizons. Still, one name which kept popping up was Jack Campbell and the Lost Fleet series. So, I was interested in checking this out when a friend decided to give me his old audiobook collection. What's my reaction? I like it with some caveats.

DAUNTLESS is the first novel in the Lost Fleet series which has the premise of Captain John "Black Jack" Geary being a officer who has been stuck in stasis for a century. Much to his dismay, he finds out his heroic last stand has been elevated to Davey Crocket at the Alamo/King Arthur levels of proportion. So much so that he is treated as the Second Coming when he is finally rescued, as well as the man who is to deliver them from the same enemy he "died" fighting so many years ago.

It's not a bad premise, though I think Jack Campbell overdoes it. Tactics have degraded in the future to the point everyone just flies at the enemy and gets killed, he's constantly reminded of how awesome he is (while thinking he's not), and everyone who is skeptical of him is either evil or dramatically overreacting. One character assumes he's going to either get them all killed in a heroic attack or try to take over the Alliance.

Despite this, I very much enjoyed the setting and liked the focus on the laws and customs of war. Black Jack is a person who comes from a more civilized time and is appalled by the treatment of prisoners in the present. I think few books bother to treat the "enemy" characters as anything but targets so this was a nice change of pace.

The starship battles are well-designed with a focus on fleet action as well as real-world tactics (applied to space) like formation, training, and the importance of discipline. Jack Campbell worked in the Navy and its influence on his work is obvious. It's nice to see someone who bucks the usual trend of military mavericks. Jack just wants a disciplined well-oiled machine and he's got a bunch of Leeroy Jenkins in starships.

In conclusion, this is an entertaining fun book even if it's not something that I absolutely felt I had to read. I'm going to pick up the entire series, though, because I don't mind a comforting tale of a badass captain who is always right (even though he keeps reassuring the reader he's a fallible mortal).
11 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


justjack
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 to 5 stars, depending on what you're looking for
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2022
Verified Purchase
My review refers to the overall series known as "The Lost Fleet." That's because it's really more of an 1,800 page book broken into six volumes, than it is six individual books. Indeed, in some cases the next book takes up the story less than a week after the events on the final pages of the previous book.

What I liked: I liked the action and the battles, of which there's plenty, and I liked most of the hard science. Campbell's solution to the basic sci-fi challenge of faster-than-light travel was reasonable and original.

What I didn't like: too much time is spent on the details of fleet deployment and in-battle tactics (fortunately, you can always skip those bits, and substitute in your mind scenes from Star Wars). I also was bored by the parts related to Captain Geary's tangled and hapless love life. Those parts seriously hurt the third and fourth books in the series. Lastly, the writing itself is merely okay. Word choices are occasionally odd, and sentence structure sometimes requires you to stop and reread a passage in order to understand what's going on.

Finally, a word about the main character, Black Jack Geary. Prior to his century-long hibernation, he was a reasonably competent mid-level officer, commanding a mid-level space cruiser in a peacetime space navy. To find that, upon his thawing out, he possesses strategic vision and tactical knowledge that makes him a genius compared to his fellow officers, requires a very serious suspension of disbelief. But it's core to the series, so what the heck, why not. I don't call this an actual detriment to the series, but it's worth noting and shining a light on it.

Overall, I liked the six books in the Lost Fleet series, and would personally give it 4 stars. If good writing matters to you (such writing is undoubtedly part of the appeal of the Patrick O'Brien novels), then you might be inclined to dock one star. On the other hand, if you're looking for pulpy space opera with plenty of pew-pew space battles, and you don't care a whit about writing style or cardboard characters (I swear I mean that in a non-sarcastic way!), then you'll probably find this a five-star experience.
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Christopher W
5.0 out of 5 stars Life, given back to a dead man.
Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2022
Verified Purchase
Imagine that you were in an unexpected battle against overwhelming odds and stayed behind on your ship fighting so everyone else could escape to safety. After doing so, your ship is so badly damaged that you get in a life pod and get cryogenically frozen and are presumed dead and lost to the stars. You are used as an example for your military for courage, strength, fortitude, and become a legendary hero for a war that began with that historic battle. In a bold move your military forms a huge fleet to fight a final decisive battle in the heart of enemy territory. On the way to that location over a 100 years later that fleet finds your life pod and thaws you out not long before the power sustaining that pod is about to run out. The legendary hero found right before the biggest and most important battle of that long war. A few weeks later you discover it was a trap, the fleet admiral is about to negotiate a surrender and withdrawal, and places you in charge of the fleet and tasks you with getting it home in case anything bad should befall the admiral. The admiral and leadership negotiation team are then brutally murdered and you find yourself in command , weeks after a 100 plus year frozen slumber. What would you do ? If you're Blackjack Geary, your duty, follow orders, and do your best or die trying, hopefully, without the dying part.
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Mary Soon LeeTop Contributor: Fantasy Books
4.0 out of 5 stars Fun military SF with a hero discomfited by his outsize reputation.
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2019
Verified Purchase
This is the first book in a military science fiction series. I read the bulk of it during a long day of travel involving two flights. I am not a person who enjoys flying, and this book was a perfect distraction. I was able to lose myself in the plight of its hero, a hero who has to combat both huge military challenges and the fact that his reputation has been inflated to legendary proportions. The situation felt somewhat contrived, but created the fuel for a thoroughly entertaining plot. I found the hero very likable. I liked his discomfort at playing the legendary figure others expected him to be. I also found the space battles nicely done — showing what might happen if two fleets clashed at a significant fraction of lightspeed. I'm hoping that later volumes in the series will develop the relationships between the main character and some of the secondary characters, and I should find out soon, as I plan to read book two on my return flights, if not before.

About my reviews: I try to review every book I read, including those that I don't end up enjoying. The reviews are not scholarly, but just indicate my reaction as a reader, reading being my addiction. I am miserly with 5-star reviews; 4 stars means I liked a book very much; 3 stars means I liked it; 2 stars means I didn't like it (though often the 2-star books are very popular with other readers and/or are by authors whose other work I've loved).
2 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Kevin Varela
2.0 out of 5 stars Protagonist has a massive impostor syndrome. Could not finish.
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2022
Verified Purchase
(SPOILER WARNING)

Protagonist has a massive impostor syndrome, and the book doesn't fail to remind of you that fact. You have to know that John Geary is not the Black Jack Geary, the alliance hero. He's just a man.

It's a tell, not show novel too. It just tells you plainly what a person is feeling or what is happening, and even what John Geary is thinking (but the novel is 3rd person view). It's a bumpy read because of it.

It has a lot of illogical plot points (at least for me) too. Why would all the commanding officers all go to an obvious trap in the beginning? Why is John Geary treated as a household hero when he just defended a convoy retreat as best as he can? In the beginning, his nephew basically did the same thing, a retreat from overwhelming odds which ended in a sacrifice. For a people in war for centuries, you would think they would think of more efficient ways of waging war instead of just "better weapons" and "throwing all our best officers so what's left are just amateurs".

I just cannot buy in to the story. Feels wishy-washy to me. But premise did hook me in, it has that.
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


T Reynolds
4.0 out of 5 stars very good military sci fi
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2022
Verified Purchase
I have read all the 15 or so books and just preordered the next. Good writing, good character development, lots of variations on the battles, realistic dealing with people and politics. Every character has flaws and some are really bad people. Even Jack has a few though he is in the Jack Reacher realm as a character. However, could not give it a five stars because of some stylistic issues:. Every book restates too many tropes (port vs starboard, flashing lights in the net, etc)rehashed during the first 15-20% if each book.

He does not seem to have a clear vision of the Dauntless layout (and all other ships for that matter). I don't even know what it looks like from the outside. He is much better describing people rather than places,

However, I have really enjoyed all of them and will continue to read. He has some wonderful turns of phrase and an oustanding vocabulary.
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Moose C.
4.0 out of 5 stars Good SciFi
Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2020
Verified Purchase
The book has likeable characters and an interesting plot. Fairly easy read.
However, there are times when the story telling gets lost in the weeds. Too much technical jargon when describing the battles and the movements of the ships - sometimes very challenging to follow.
If you like military science fiction this is a good read and belongs on your list.
The other small but annoying trope used by the author is the Syndicates. The CEOs of the Syndicates are the bad guys. Seriously lazy back-story. Yeah, a war between Apple and the United Nations.
Generally enjoyable read and I will continue onto the next book in the series.
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


Catherine MackayTop Contributor: Classical Music
5.0 out of 5 stars A legend returns to bring a lost fleet home
Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2015
Verified Purchase
A thoroughly enjoyable book that I couldn't put down. I loved the premise of a fleet lost behind enemy lines, trying to make their way home without incurring too many more losses. The main character, Captain John Geary a.k.a. 'Black Jack Geary' is a man the reader can't help having some empathy for. Afterall, how would you feel if everyone thought you were dead, but then, nearly a hundred years later, you were found (having been in hibernation for that period of time). That is precisely what happens to John 'Black Jack' Geary. Only trouble is, everyone has blown his 'last words' during battle more than a hundred years ago out of all proportion. He has become a legend - his words and deeds cited into Alliance Fleet lore. The trouble is, he doesn't see himself as particularly worthy of such status. He is, afterall, just an ordinary man capable of errors of judgmemt and with the usual compliment of character flaws, just as any man or women. Yet, after the fleet admiral along with many senior offices are shot and killed while trying to negotiate with the Syndicate (enemies of the Alliance), he finds himself in command of the Alliance Fleet and having to combat his legendry status. Throughout the remainder of the book Black Jack has to whip his, sometimes mulish Captains, into a cohesive force that fights together in a disciplined manner while taking a more backward route back into Alliance space. He has an up-hill battle as, in the interum years he has been gone, the Alliance forces have become increasingly aggressive and this has resulted in, not only the loss of experienced officers, but a prevailing attitude of 'glory hunting' by some ship captains. Using all his wits he comes up with unique solutions to bring some of his recalcitrant Captains into line. Campbell uses a lot of humor to demonstrate the often comical situations that Black Jack has to endure - his oft quoted sayings have reached almost mythic status and people in the fleet seem to have no problem quoting them directly to him, sailors who turn worshipful eyes on him, and of coursee nearly everyone seems to believe that he can do not wrong and will get them home - while really, all he would like to do is: hide in his State-room. In addition, Campbell's description of the logistical nature of fighting a battle in space is right on the money and makes for tense reading. A highly recommended read.
7 people found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
    Showing 0 comments

There was a problem loading comments right now. Please try again later.


  • ←Previous page
  • Next page→

Need customer service? Click here
‹ See all details for The Lost Fleet: Dauntless

Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations
›
View or edit your browsing history
After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Back to top
Get to Know Us
  • Careers
  • Blog
  • About Amazon
  • Sustainability
  • Press Center
  • Investor Relations
  • Amazon Devices
  • Amazon Science
Make Money with Us
  • Sell products on Amazon
  • Sell apps on Amazon
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Become a Delivery Driver
  • Start a package delivery business
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Self-Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
  • ›See More Ways to Make Money
Amazon Payment Products
  • Amazon Rewards Visa Signature Cards
  • Amazon Store Card
  • Amazon Secured Card
  • Amazon Business Card
  • Shop with Points
  • Credit Card Marketplace
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Amazon Currency Converter
Let Us Help You
  • Amazon and COVID-19
  • Your Account
  • Your Orders
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Amazon Prime
  • Returns & Replacements
  • Manage Your Content and Devices
  • Amazon Assistant
  • Help
EnglishChoose a language for shopping.
United StatesChoose a country/region for shopping.
Amazon Music
Stream millions
of songs
Amazon Advertising
Find, attract, and
engage customers
Amazon Drive
Cloud storage
from Amazon
6pm
Score deals
on fashion brands
AbeBooks
Books, art
& collectibles
ACX
Audiobook Publishing
Made Easy
Alexa
Actionable Analytics
for the Web
 
Sell on Amazon
Start a Selling Account
Amazon Business
Everything For
Your Business
Amazon Fresh
Groceries & More
Right To Your Door
AmazonGlobal
Ship Orders
Internationally
Home Services
Experienced Pros
Happiness Guarantee
Amazon Ignite
Sell your original
Digital Educational
Resources
Amazon Web Services
Scalable Cloud
Computing Services
 
Audible
Listen to Books & Original
Audio Performances
Book Depository
Books With Free
Delivery Worldwide
Box Office Mojo
Find Movie
Box Office Data
ComiXology
Thousands of
Digital Comics
DPReview
Digital
Photography
Fabric
Sewing, Quilting
& Knitting
Goodreads
Book reviews
& recommendations
 
IMDb
Movies, TV
& Celebrities
IMDbPro
Get Info Entertainment
Professionals Need
Kindle Direct Publishing
Indie Digital & Print Publishing
Made Easy
Amazon Photos
Unlimited Photo Storage
Free With Prime
Prime Video Direct
Video Distribution
Made Easy
Shopbop
Designer
Fashion Brands
Amazon Warehouse
Great Deals on
Quality Used Products
 
Whole Foods Market
America’s Healthiest
Grocery Store
Woot!
Deals and
Shenanigans
Zappos
Shoes &
Clothing
Ring
Smart Home
Security Systems
eero WiFi
Stream 4K Video
in Every Room
Blink
Smart Security
for Every Home
Neighbors App
Real-Time Crime
& Safety Alerts
 
    Amazon Subscription Boxes
Top subscription boxes – right to your door
PillPack
Pharmacy Simplified
Amazon Renewed
Like-new products
you can trust
   
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Interest-Based Ads
© 1996-2022, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates