Download , by Kim Stanley Robinson
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, by Kim Stanley Robinson

Download , by Kim Stanley Robinson
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Produktinformation
Format: Kindle Ausgabe
Dateigröße: 1310 KB
Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 802 Seiten
Verlag: HarperVoyager; Auflage: New Ed (11. April 2013)
Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.Ã r.l.
Sprache: Englisch
ASIN: B00BS06U1E
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Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
3.1 von 5 Sternen
27 Kundenrezensionen
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
#137.374 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)
I was thrilled reading the first two books in this trilogy, and I was thrilled with Blue Mars as well. The author has a broad vision for political change which I find inspiring. He seems to have done a lot of research on technology and describes the impact of technological inventions on society in detail.There are some new characters in the third novel, but most of the protagonists are with us from the first part up to the end. This gives the story some continuity. However, on the down side, Blue Mars is a lot about character development of some few characters. I would have wanted to read more about the transformation of society and economy on Mars in contrast to the old Earth system.Despite some lenghty parts, the Mars trilogy is one of the very best pieces of science-fiction I have ever read! Highly recommended for "want-to-be-future-colonists" like me.
Auch wenn der dritte Band schon etwas weiter vom technisch möglichen Abschweift, ist auch dieser Teil der Mars Trilogie eine großartige Aussicht auf die Zeit, in der wir uns das unser Sonnensystem zu eigen machen.
Who hopes for mind-boggling story arcs, tension, action, character development, and all things that made Red Mars so good... should really keep on scrolling, because you won't find it in Blue Mars.Instead of following anything resembling a story, Robinson goes into unreasonably long intra-character discussions about human psyche, abstract economy, and everything metaphysical you could ever think of. In doing so he uses the phrases "kind of", "like", "something", "perhaps" to such an inflationary extent that I even now, weeks after completing this novel, cringe whenever I see these phrases in any context. This is not bold fiction, this is Robinson trying to solve all the inner human's riddles by making stuff up, and then rambling for dozens (!) of consecutive pages. Ever wanted to read five consecutive pages discussing different shades of red? This is your chance!There are some starting point for very good, thrilling story arcs, political schemes, awesome developments, and great science fiction, but Robinson glosses over them in half a page, and only indirectly. (paraphrased: "Character X is now going on this really exciting adventurous trip that will expand human boundaries..Buuuut, she is not the first one to do this, and thousands of other have already taken this trip. Anyway, she leaves, never to be heard of again. Character Y is really sad about that. But she is still with him in his heart [insert 14-pages of discussion of how all life is connected on a subatomic level by phase-locked quantum spin states, after which Character Y is as happy as a bunny again]")The only two good things about this novel are that it concludes the trilogy in a (somewhat) acceptable manner, and the very vivid and lively description of terraformed Martian landscapes and Martian regions. Put up NASA's newly released Mars map while reading, and you will have a somewhat interesting time with this novel.
Let's face it: the best book in Robinson's Mars trilogy is the first one. After that, he coasts for another 1300+ pages, perhaps realizing that many readers will finish the trilogy either on principle or out of some internally driven obsessive compulsion (I probably fit into the latter category).The final book in the trilogy is easily the weakest. The plot is plodding and uninteresting, the descriptions of the planet as its "terraforming" process continues are excessive and often boring, and the now-ancient surviving members of the "First Hundred" are insufferably always the same. Robinson knows a LOT about many contemporary fields of science, and it's to his credit that he attempts to share this knowledge with his readers. However, his presentations of this information usually take the form of long, cul-de-sac-like digressions which left me with the impression that Robinson chose to use this final Mars novel as a kind of bully pulpit to publi! cize his particular viewpoints regarding various scientific controversies. He also shows a vigorous and sometimes refreshing interest in the possibilities for new political and economic structures in the future, but ultimately, his ideas seem a muddle. He introduces, for example, the notion that there might be a "good" transnational corporation in the future that can play the financial and technological White Knight for those who wish to be free of interplanetary imperialistic capitalism. How this ultimately works, however (and what really makes "Praxis" different from its competitors), is left to our imaginations. The corporate spy sent by Praxis to Mars in *Green Mars* goes native in a hurry and then simply becomes another "good guy" in the story.The book is badly in need of editing. There are loose ends everywhere--solid, stolid Nadia, for example, becomes Free Mars' first President, and then predictably begins to exhibit despotic tende! ncies. Just as this latest manifestation of the old adage ! that "power corrupts" begins to gather steam, however, that thread is dropped--forever. And what DID ever happen to the quasi-mystical Hiroko? Did Robinson forget to tell us, or are we simply supposed to intuit our own version of what her mysterious fate might be?One of the strong points of *Red Mars* was its overall apparent credibility. As one read the book, it really seemed that the various twists and turns in the plot were prophetic as to what might well happen if and when Mars is ever colonized. In *Blue Mars*, however, things start going "Buck Rogers." Consider this: in the future, humans will colonize Mercury by building an enclosed city that moves constantly on big railroad tracks around and around the planet to escape that world's temperature extremes. Hmmmmm. Other people will build cities for the near-weightless on the moons of Uranus, and still others will burrow into asteroids to create little mini-colonies that travel hither and yon. ! I also confess to finding it hard to believe that through scientific legerdemain Mars will (or can) be turned into a kind of mirror of earth, complete with genetically engineered polar bears and puffins. By the end, the entire trajectory of the "terraforming" process strains reader credulity. Yeah, I guess I lack imagination. On the other hand, even "Star Trek" never has gone to such extremes in its claims for future technological breakthroughs.Overall, I recommend that readers buy and read *Red Mars*, and then skip the final two books of the trilogy.
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