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, by Brandon Q. Morris
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Product details
File Size: 1844 KB
Print Length: 436 pages
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
Publisher: Hard-SF.com (October 15, 2018)
Publication Date: October 15, 2018
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B07GKPC16B
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#2,663 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
A supposedly realistic story about a rush-job trip to a moon of Saturn. It has tons of actual realistic details, so you think the author really knows his stuff. But then it leaves HUGE, horrible, impossible gaping holes that just make you want to gag.First, the mission "training" consists only of a few medical test. Supposedly the mission is rushed for budget reasons ... supposedly just like the Apollo program. But Apollo, as much of a deadline as it had, spent months and months training the crew -- all together, for each task. But the crew of this ship don't even meet each other until a few days before they take off. The author didn't have to take you through the boring details of training. He could have mentioned it in a few paragraphs. But instead, he makes a point that there was no specific training at all for the mission tasks.Then: Apparently NASA doesn't bother to even send telemetry from the very critical supply ship back to earth. So a huge, horrible problem that happens doesn't even get a chance to be known by the main crew until months after it happens (this could have been fixed by merely changing a few dates in the text -- but it was left as a huge hole.) And almost worst of all, NASA doesn't send (for privacy reasons, I guess?? which is ludicrous) medical information on the crew back to earth.Oh, and don't look for any character development or interesting things like that. Just "they went and did this ... and then this ... and then this life-threatening problem happens and they don't even talk to NASA about it ..." and so forth.As bad as NASA is sometimes, considering the causes of two Shuttle disasters and the inefficiencies of some of their development projects, their incompetence is nothing like what is implied by this book.
It sounded great with glowing reviews but like many sci-fi novels, the literary quality suffers. The writing is clumsy, filled with one anachronism after the other, constatnt references ( in 2040’s) to current events and odd sentence structure. The biggest problem is not the rather boring story but the empty main character - Martin. At any time I expected to read, “And then Martin’s cybertronic brain frozeâ€. He seems detached from reality.The first third was training for the mission (snore.....) then the interminable flight with the usual sci-fi problems - spacemances about as sexy as a heat shield, disaster after launch, miraculous solutions, blah blah. Finally they arrive, find alien life, are forced to sacrifice, have new problems before saving the day; I did not understand eithervthe structure Of the ending or the ending itself. If you want to get a manual on flying to Saturn this is the book for you. But if you want and grossing story about characters it change and grow and Imaginative plots then skip this one.
Morris is a science writer, and so while the descriptive aspects of this highly-detailed trip to Saturn's moon, Enceladus, are comprehensive and convincing, the novel is let down by being mostly exposition. Dialogue is sparse, and while the point of view is third-person, we only ever get into the head of reluctant astronaut-protagonist Martin (his surname is used so infrequently I can't actually recall it), and he seems to have Asperberger's or something similar, because he is generally emotionally disconnected from everything and everyone. Presented as a stereotypical, introspective geek, Martin spends so much time analyzing everything - from situations to his own reactions - that we're pretty much passengers in his emotionally monotone inner space. This means that all the alternative views that might have built up the tension - and lots goes wrong on a cobbled together space ship rushed off to Enceladus to look for alien life - are missing in action.Which is a shame, because Morris eventually delivers an interesting story, but it is dry as dust in the first 90% of the novel. Toward the end things get interesting, and the situation somewhat allows Martin to express his emotional voice, but it's too little, too late. Also, it needs an aggressive editor, because there are many instances of sentences that could have been pared back to make them both easier to read, and more 'slippery' with regards the storytelling. Instead, Morris tells, rather than emotes, which means the novel comes across more like a user manual than a story.So, an interesting tale if you like a lot of gritty detail about spaceflight and can accommodate a lack of dialogue and viewpoints. If not, be warned, it's interesting but not engaging.
This book was so different from other sci-Fi books in which we are ot concerning ourselves about a war or how to survive other intelligent life attempting to end humaniity, etc. Foer the last 10 - 20 years sci-fi has branched out into space operas, military space novels, etc. This book was none of the above. I would consider this a throw'-back to some form of the original type of sci-Fi novels. In fact it might be closer to Jules Verne than to our current sci-fi writers (no insult intended, just differnet style).Loved the book and it's characters and can't wait to start the next book in the series.
Great technical detail. Clever and inventive plot and twists. A very credible story about a most incredible mission. IMHO there are no significant flaws. I’ve purchased the next book in the series. For context, I’ve been reading sf since the mid-1950s (Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, Benford, Hogan, etc.). My current favorites are novels by McDevitt and the James S A Corey Expanse series.
Wooden dialog, characters made of plastic and cardboard, very predictable plot with holes big enough to drop a moon through. Could not finish.I have no idea how the manuscript got past the editor and escaped into the wild.Pass.
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