Home :: Books :: Horror  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror

Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Precipice (The Asteriod Wars, Book 1)

The Precipice (The Asteriod Wars, Book 1)

List Price: $40.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Bova used to be good
Review: I used to really enjoy Ben Bova's books. Examples such as "Colony" and "Millennium" spring to mind. Unfortunately his more recent works (including this one) tend to read like poorly written soap operas. The science is still good though in this world where hard science fiction seems to be disappearing in favour of fantasy. This will probably keep me buying his novels but I do it with more trepidation than before.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Nothing to see here
Review: I'm a huge fan of Ben Bova, but this novel is simply not good. As a continuation of the chararcter Dan Randolf, I was really looking forward to it. Unfortunately, the book really becomes nothing more than Randolf running around begging for money. I also think the book is missing any kind of real climax, it's really a setup for the next novel in the series (I assume).

I thought "Colony" was an awesome saga. "The Precipice" is aweful soggy.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Nothing to see here
Review: I'm a huge fan of Ben Bova, but this novel is simply not good. As a continuation of the chararcter Dan Randolf, I was really looking forward to it. Unfortunately, the book really becomes nothing more than Randolf running around begging for money. I also think the book is missing any kind of real climax, it's really a setup for the next novel in the series (I assume).

I thought "Colony" was an awesome saga. "The Precipice" is aweful soggy.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as good as his other books
Review: I've enjoyed all of Bova's books that chronicle the exploration of our solar system. Compared to his other books, however, this one wasn't quite as interesting. The strength of his stories is always in the science. This story had more focus on characters, which he doesn't handle quite as well. If you liked Moonrise and Moonwar, this book is worth reading since it's the next step in the progression of that story, but if you're just starting with Bova, his books Mars, Venus, and Jupiter are much more entertaining.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Human nature at its' best and worst
Review: If there is one constant in the world, it is that all aspects of human nature will follow humans wherever they happen to go in the universe. In this book, Bova describes an Earth with two runaway conditions. The first is that the greenhouse effect has reached runaway proportions with dramatic and very deadly consequences. The second is a societal backlash among many of the people of Earth against some of the technological solutions. While humans have expanded out to establish significant colonies off Earth and these colonies can offer help, much is being refused. Some of the political blocks on Earth refuse to import energy from off planet, preferring to burn fossil fuels and pump the carbon dioxide deep into the planet. Another difficulty is a social movement called the New Morality, which maintains that many other technological solutions are against natural, moral law.
Against this backdrop, there are some people with the idealism to try to find a solution acceptable to all. That solution is to open up the asteroid belt to mining. One man forms a company and builds a ship with a fusion drive that will make it possible to exploit the resources of the asteroids. However, he must form a limited partnership with another man whose interest in gaining control and serving his own interests is matched only by his ruthlessness. We see all that is good in humans: kindness, loyalty, idealism and a can-do attitude of engineering expertise. Unfortunately, and this makes the story more entertaining, we also see disloyalty, brutal mercenary behavior, irrational anger and hatred; ruthless sexual exploitation and simple greed. To those who think that this is not possible, we only need to look back on what has occurred when new frontiers opened up on Earth. The cynics among us believe that such circumstances will be repeated when new worlds are finally opened up.
The book is more a tale of the battle among the personalities than it is a science fiction story. If you are someone that prefers a story with personal conflict with a science fiction backdrop, then you will really enjoy it. However, if you prefer more science with only a smattering of the human interaction stuff, then you most likely will find it uninteresting. I cannot say that the good guys win in the end. The best that can be said is that it is an ambiguous draw.

This review refers to the hardcover version.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Human nature at its' best and worst
Review: If there is one constant in the world, it is that all aspects of human nature will follow humans wherever they happen to go in the universe. In this book, Bova describes an Earth with two runaway conditions. The first is that the greenhouse effect has reached runaway proportions with dramatic and very deadly consequences. The second is a societal backlash among many of the people of Earth against some of the technological solutions. While humans have expanded out to establish significant colonies off Earth and these colonies can offer help, much is being refused. Some of the political blocks on Earth refuse to import energy from off planet, preferring to burn fossil fuels and pump the carbon dioxide deep into the planet. Another difficulty is a social movement called the New Morality, which maintains that many other technological solutions are against natural, moral law.
Against this backdrop, there are some people with the idealism to try to find a solution acceptable to all. That solution is to open up the asteroid belt to mining. One man forms a company and builds a ship with a fusion drive that will make it possible to exploit the resources of the asteroids. However, he must form a limited partnership with another man whose interest in gaining control and serving his own interests is matched only by his ruthlessness. We see all that is good in humans: kindness, loyalty, idealism and a can-do attitude of engineering expertise. Unfortunately, and this makes the story more entertaining, we also see disloyalty, brutal mercenary behavior, irrational anger and hatred; ruthless sexual exploitation and simple greed. To those who think that this is not possible, we only need to look back on what has occurred when new frontiers opened up on Earth. The cynics among us believe that such circumstances will be repeated when new worlds are finally opened up.
The book is more a tale of the battle among the personalities than it is a science fiction story. If you are someone that prefers a story with personal conflict with a science fiction backdrop, then you will really enjoy it. However, if you prefer more science with only a smattering of the human interaction stuff, then you most likely will find it uninteresting. I cannot say that the good guys win in the end. The best that can be said is that it is an ambiguous draw.

This review refers to the hardcover version.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Appeared in Analog
Review: This is a very cool story, usual good Bova job. Just want people to realize that this was previously serialized in Analog Magazine, since there is no warning of that on this page!


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates