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SCIENCE FICTION/Bova Ben
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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
New York : Tor 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Ben Bova, 1932-2020 (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Tom Doherty Associates book."
Physical Description
411 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780765379504
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This unpolished sequel to New Earth brings space traveler Jordan Kell back to his native soil. Isolated on his return to Earth and protected by a World Council security team, Kell finds Earth changed in his absence, but not changed enough. The aged and wealthy still exert control over the young and aimless. As Kell urges his fellow humans to become interstellar heroes, the World Council tries to tighten its grip on humanity's destiny. Many of the characters are more types than individuals, representing ideals instead of fully developed people with their own consistent motivations. The settings and culture are vividly rendered, though the composition relies heavily on repetition. The last third of the book loses steam as Bova applies the brakes on adventure, instead using coincidence and absurdity to arrive at a risible conclusion. There is talk of grand space odysseys but none of the promised thrills. The reader who continues trudging through this final section will reach a satisfying but contrived and somewhat unearned conclusion. Agent: Barbara Bova, Barbara Bova Literary. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

Sequel to New Earth (2013), in which humans explored a planet orbiting the star Sirius that turned out to be inhabited. By human-aliens. After a voyage lasting 80 years, diplomat Jordan Kell and his team reached New Earth to learn that the world was built by machine intelligences known as the Predecessors and populated by them with a human species created from Earth DNA. With their advanced science, the Predecessors learned of a vast explosion in the galactic core that has caused a lethal sphere of gamma radiation to expand through the galaxy, killing all life it touches. Jordan and his New Earther wife, Aditi, returned in cryogenic suspension to Earth. Though the Death Wave won't reach Earth for 2,000 years and New Earth scientists have developed shields against it, many other intelligent but pre-technological species won't surviveunless Jordan and Aditi can persuade the World Council to build starships and go help them. Unfortunately, Anita Halleck, the ruthless and more-or-less immortal Council chair, dreams of controlling all the far-flung, independent-minded settlements scattered throughout the solar system and ruling them forever. If Jordan swings public opinion to his side, Halleck's imperial ambitions will be finished. So, she reasons, she must find a way to shut the star travelers up. Permanently. Most of the book, then, details the twists and turns of a political battle that's several surprises short of intriguing and conducted in slow motion with rubber knives. Bova supplies sufficient fresh detail to keep things from going catatonic, but the jury's still out on whether he's showing us a human society that's finally beginning to mature or one that's yawning and stretching before bedtime. Not the best entry in this long and uneven series, but regulars won't want to give up the habit now. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.