Book Description
The first photographic tour of the surface of another planet has now been accomplished. Those who thrilled to the lunar beauty of Full Moon and the IMAX smash Roving Mars will marvel at this awesome, vivid, beautiful portrait of what it is like to take a stroll on Mars.
The most fantastic of all journeysthe Spirit and Opportunity mobile robot missions to the surface of Marsproduced over 150,000 astonishing photographs. While the images were made available on low-resolution computer screens as they were sent back across millions of space miles, no one until now has done the painstaking work of editing, cropping, and processing these massive (often larger than 100 megabytes) images.
The person to do it is Jim Bell, the scientist and photographer who led the photography team on this historic expedition. With his unique perspective, these photographs take us from the brave launches of these robots, to the alien landscape they discovered and the mysteries of the planet that they have helped to solve.
Over 150 lavish full-color-process prints bring the colors and textures of Mars to vivid life on the page. Four of the most impressive pictures are presented in their entirety as gatefold images which extend over three feet in widthproviding a view of the surface of another planet unprecedented in its detail and clarity. Postcards from Mars is the perfect gift to give readers who have their feet on the ground and their eyes on the heavens.
Customer Reviews:
Had some damage.......2007-09-27
A beautiful book for a good price. However, the book came with a damaged corner that was not related to the packing. It should have been rated at a lower level.
In fact, this has been the only book I have ever received with this kind of damage.
So, who is profiting from this great book!.......2007-05-16
This book is simply fantastic! The photos are "out of this world". However, my only concern is that as a tax payer, who funded these missions to Mars, how is it that someone is profiting from these photos taken by United States of America vehicles? Why isn't the money from this book going to the USA to offset the cost of the mission?
Mars at ours fingers.......2007-05-16
Spirit and Opportunity rovers are in good health after
three years of hard working in freeze dusty environment.
All this history and images are excelent exposed in this
great book.
spectacular.......2007-05-15
Beautifully written and coreographed , this book is spectacular. The photos from the Mars' surface are superb. What backs up the visuals are the insightful information from an scientist who wrote the book and created it. It is very readable and has a lot of interesting information. It is not a book to instantly read through but to read in sections and savor. I am glad I found the review in USAtoday otherwise I might not have even known about it.This is my review and I think it is a great book for those who want to find and learn about Mars up close.
Mars Photography - with a bonus.......2007-05-07
I expected great photographs in this book and I was not disappointed. They are outstanding. What I didn't expect were the detailed text descriptions of the science and engineering that went into this mission. In addition to being a great coffee table book, it is also a book that I have spent many hours carefully reading. That was a bonus that I didn't expect, but one that I deeply appreciate. Thanks to everyone who contributed to this wonderful project.
Book Description
teve Squyres is the face and voice of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover mission. Squyres dreamed up the mission in 1987, saw it through from conception in 1995 to a successful landing in 2004, and serves as the principal scientist of its $400 million payload. He has gained a rare inside look at what it took for rovers Spirit and Opportunity to land on the red planet in January 2004-and knows firsthand their findings.
Customer Reviews:
FACT MORE INTERSTING THAN FICTION.......2007-09-16
The author captures how difficult it is to explore another planet--and to be one of the leaders of the team that imagined, built, launched and drove two robots around the surface of Mars. While the story is true, the book is anything but dull. Dr. Squyers' book reads like a novel and portrays the trials and tribulations of engineers trying to build and test a machine that can travel a million miles, get bounced on Mars, unhook itself, stand up, crawl onto the Mars surface, take photos, scratch the surface of and analyze rocks, and-- travel for more miles and months than anyone's wildest dreams. All this in search of evidence of water. Read the book to learn if they succeeded.
Hard to get past the initial part.......2007-09-03
I've been to Steve Squyres lecture with the same title. The lecture, and Steve Squyres, were inspiring. So I bought the book. I'm still trying to get past the initial phase where Steve Squyres describes the hurdles of getting the project up and running. The book is tedious, with a lot of details that don't add to clarity, rather confuse with acronyms that hide the goal and the mission. If Steve Squyres' goal was to educate the reader as to how complex a problem it is to send a rover to Mars, more politically than technically, then he has succeeded. I was hoping to see more vision and insipration and maybe I'll get it once I get past the initital phase of getting the project off the ground.
Absolute Must Read.......2007-06-07
Steven Squyres gives a detailed look into the world of NASA's space mission proposals, using his personal experiences. He explains how he completely messed up with the dimensions of his first proposal. Mr. Squyres has tendency to make others look bad and to make himself look good using 20/20 hindsight and probably omitting some credit to fellow scientists, especially when it comes to geology.
His account of the Rovers is something only he could do from his position as Principle Investigator. He points out the very important problems that the rovers encountered. I did not know that a heater on the opportunity's arm had malfunctioned and has been stuck on the whole time drawing a significant amount of the rover's energy and limiting what it can do in a sol (day) as a result.
His description of geology of the sites is amazing.
You have to read this book to understand what is happening in Mars research.
Quality Science Writing.......2007-05-05
I followed the Rovers from Finland via Webcasts, since the EU countries don't seem as interested in the success of the US space program, so there wasn't all that much material here on this project. However, I wasn't expecting a very well written book, since most of the Rover stuff on the web is either way too dumbed down or way too deep (and boring) geology discussions.
Steve Squyres managed to write a very interesting book which is interesting to me on many levels. First as an engineer and scientist, it was very interesting to follow the political as well as scientific background for this project. In my own line of work, as a telecom engineer, I'm also used to project deadlines, testing, failures, and murphy's law, but it seemed even more acute on this particular project.
Second, I always admire science writers who are able to weave in a story about the history and people involved in scientific works, not just a pure technical discussion, and I think he has done that quite well here.
The only criticism I have for this book, is to say that Dr. Squyres probably should have written/published this book a few years down the road rather than when he did so that he could have put a more in depth history/review of the Rover project and it's results. After all, the Rovers are still going strong and still producing science, whereas Steve seemed to be expecting failures due to power loss to end (at least for Spirit) back on Sol
<
< today. For example, this book has no inkling about the recent exploration by Opportunity of Victoria crater and the recent Mars Observer with the new visual evidence for water seeping down the side of a crater in comparative photos.
Latest ground news.......2007-01-17
This book is highly illustrative of our near cosmic neighbor, the photographs are excellent the written content is very well done, the authorship reflects those very closely connected with this particular space effort. It is well organized and highly entertaining for those interested in this topic. I highly recommend this publication.
Average customer rating:
- The classic and now uncut
- Only For Children
- Life on another Mars
- A Mars that never was
- Adventure and rebellion on Mars
|
Red Planet
Robert Heinlein
Manufacturer: Del Rey
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Classics | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
General | Science Fiction | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
General | Heinlein, Robert A. | ( H ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
Paperback | Heinlein, Robert A. | ( H ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0345493184
Release Date: 2006-09-26 |
Book Description
Jim Marlow and his strange-looking Martian friend Willis were allowed to travel only so far. But one day Willis unwittingly tuned into a treacherous plot that threatened all the colonists on Mars, and it set Jim off on a terrfying adventure that could save--or destroy--them all!
From the Paperback edition.
Download Description
Young Mars colonist Jim Marlowe leaves his home in South Colony to attend a school at the Martian equator, and brings along his round, furry Martian friend Willis. When the friendly creature is captured and held hostage by the militaristic headmaster, Jim and his buddy Frank mount a rescue operation to save Willis--and stumble upon a terrible secret that threatens the survival of the Red Planet colonies.
Customer Reviews:
The classic and now uncut.......2007-08-16
When I read this as a child I just loved it how I wanted to go there. So I was worried rereading would ruin my love for the book. Well it holds up better than most of his works.
Ok, so we know Mars much better, it is still a fun read. I think they might of made a cartoon based on this book at some time, if not they should it make a great CGI for direct to DVD -IMHO.
Only For Children.......2006-11-04
I'm not impressed with this book. It was written quite a while ago. It's not as true to life as most of Heinlein's work... this is just low-brow work for him...
Don't read it. It's not worth your time.
Life on another Mars.......2006-10-15
The late Robert A. Heinlein remains one science fiction's greatest writers, having won four Hugo awards, three retro-Hugo awards, and the first-ever Grand Master Nebula for Lifetime Achievement. Though this novel is somewhat dated by increased knowledge of Mars, this well-written story remains interesting and intriguing.
Martian colonist Jim Marlowe and his best friends Francis "Frank" Sutton and a Martian bouncer that Jim calls Willis are preparing for their journey to school near the Martian equator. Life on Mars is relatively predictable for the colonists. In the southern winter the colonists live in the northern hemisphere, and they return to the southern hemisphere when winter settles in the north. Children begin school locally, but advanced education is at Lowell Academy at Syrtis Minor. However, someone in the company that sponsored the Mars colonists is about to change things.
A new headmaster has taken charge of Lowell Academy. The new headmaster seems to think Lowell Academy is back on Earth, because his new rules are militaristic and inconsistent with Martian culture. The new headmaster's policies set in series a chain of events that will upset colonial traditions and policies, and may ultimately end the colony on Mars!
Rather than take the new rules, Jim, Frank and Willis decide to make their way back to their home in the southern hemisphere. During their journey the trio will have to survive native carnivorous life forms, the harsh Martian nights, native Martians, and men sent by the headmaster to arrest them on trumped up charges. Their adventures result in a revolution by the Martian colonists that will forever change the Mars colony.
Heinlein had very clear beliefs about the rights of individuals, the right to own guns, and a general dislike for excessive government. Heinlein firmly described aspects of these beliefs in this Del Rey edition that restores the material removed from the original 1948 edition and subsequent reprints, along with restoring modified text to Heinlein's original version. The revised adventure is easier for avid Heinlein fans to read and fits much better with other Heinlein books. This book is also useful reading for fans of "Stranger in a Strange Land," as the Martians from this novel are quite similar to the Martians of the later novel.
Heinlein wrote many very good and great novels. This novel is very good and verges on being great. The story flow is natural and compelling, and it is easy find yourself reading the story in one sitting. Turn back the clock to an era when Mars was still believed to have canals and surface water imagine how life might have been if Percival Lowell's canals actually existed.
Enjoy!
A Mars that never was.......2006-08-02
I'm not sure that this is still a great book for kids, but as a 1950s kid, I had a great time rereading it. The Mars portrayed in this book is based on information available in the 1940s. Everyone agreed Mars had ice caps and a pair of moons, but given the telescopes of that time, nothing else was certain. Many astronomers thought they could see seasonal changes that might be due to plant growth. One authority, Percival Lowell, thought he could see a network of canals, and he described a dying planet, inhabited by an ancient race of intelligent beings. Heinlein bases his world on a combination of the speculations but pays meticulous attention to what was actually known. For example, his plot is synchronized to the rising and setting of the two moons. He imagines a Martain race that is still fascinating, and in Willis, the hero's Martain companion, he creates an unforgettable character, better than "ET." It was a great Mars. Too bad it never existed!
Adventure and rebellion on Mars.......2006-04-29
RED PLANET is one of the 'juvenile' novels RAH wrote in the '50's and early '60's. The action centers on Jim and Frank, young colonists on Mars, and Jim's 'pet', Willis. Mars is run by the Company who supplies the colonists needs, including a boarding school for high school aged colonists and organizing the annual migration. As Jim and Frank (and Willis) arrive at school they discover that not everyone working for the Company has the colonists best interests at heart. The kind head master is replaced by an autocratic bully who promptly confiscates all guns and pets - including Willis. While rescuing Willis the boys uncover a more serious plot and soon the three are fleeing across the planet to warn their families.
This book is very much a precursor to STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND, the descriptions of the Martians, their culture, and abilities are very much the same. The basic story is one of RAH's typical youngster(s) same their society with the help of friendly aliens, very much in the same vein as, PODKAYNE, HAVE SPACESUIT WILL TRAVEL, THE STAR BEAST etc. As always with RAH's stories it is exciting, has more than a few interesting twists and will probably cause the reader to re-examine some long held beliefs. It also has some more annoying RAH traits - the women are definitely there to feed the men and raise the children, the characters are all either completely good or completely bad. RAH's familiar themes of 'arms make the citizen', 'big government is bad government', 'the aliens will save us' and 'women need to be protected by men' are also all there as well.
This is a fun read, for both adults and children. It would be a great introduction to RAH's work and is a definite must read for any STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND fans.
Amazon.com
Mars holds a special fascination for us, because it is the most Earth-like planet we've yet encountered. As we continue to explore the red planet, geological evidence mounts that long ago water flowed freely across its surface, begging the question: If there was water, was there life? Graham Hancock thinks so. In fact, Hancock, a former journalist and the author of several books, including Fingerprints of the Gods, believes that certain formations on the Martian surface are the remnants of an ancient civilization--one strikingly similar to ancient Egypt--that was destroyed by a cataclysmic deep impact. Further, Hancock claims that NASA's reluctance to give credence to "The Face," "The Pyramids," and other things people see in images of the Martian surface is evidence that the U.S. space agency is motivated by cold war paranoia and mistrust. Hancock seems to be more fair-minded than many NASA critics, stating that, "what we see is a mindset, here, not a conspiracy." And indeed, one is hard-pressed to imagine why NASA isn't agreeing wholeheartedly with Hancock, since his ultimate point is that we should be paying more attention to our planetary neighbors and the skies above, lest we suffer the same fate as the Martians. Hancock raises many intriguing questions in this synthesis of unorthodox Mars theory, but those looking for applications of Ockham's razor had best search elsewhere--Hancock's theories require a leap of faith as surely as NASA's do. --Therese Littleton
Book Description
An asteroid transformed Mars from a lush planet with rivers and oceans into a bleak and icy hell. Is Earth condemned to the same fate, or can we protect ourselves and our planet from extinction?
In his most riveting and revealing book yet, Graham Hancock examines the evidence that the barren Red Planet was once home to a lush environment of flowing rivers, lakes, and oceans. Could Mars have sustained life and civilization?
Megaliths found on the parched shores of Cydonia, a former Martian ocean, mirror the geometrical conventions of the pyramids at Egypt's Giza necropolis. Especially startling is a Sphinx-like structure depicting a face with distinguishable diadem, teeth, mouth and an Egyptian-style headdress. Might there be a connection between the structures of Egypt and those of Mars? Why does NASA continue to dismiss these remarkable anomalies as "a trick of light"? Hancock points to the intriguing possibility that ancient Martian civilization is communicating with us through the remarkable structures it left behind.
In exploring the possible traces left by the Martian civilization and the cosmic cataclysm that may have ended it,
The Mars Mystery is both an illumination of our ancient past and a warning--that we still have time to heed--about our ultimate fate.
Customer Reviews:
surprisingly enlightening!.......2007-05-20
You could read the title as "A warning from history that could save life on earth" or you could read the book and justify that it should have read "A rambling from conspirators that could ignite paranoia on earth."
Joke beside, this was actually very enlightening. I just thought it's be some crackpot ideas about Mars. I was 95% sold on the idea when they got into the mathmatics, which match those of ancient earth monuments. Reading that part alone sent me into shivers with a wide-eyed gaze. The second part which grabbed me was the section on camets and astroids. The truth is straight told and this alone will leave you wide-eyed. Getting into the speculation will just send your eyes drooping from their sockets.
So, the mathmatics and the comets were the best parts of the book. The rest was just filler - getting from one point to another.
The Mars Mystery.......2007-03-09
This book is right on the subject for me. Could this be true???? I think so
Mars: A Part of the Human saga?.......2006-04-13
This is among the earlier of Graham Hancock's remarkable series of books on unknown Human History. It concerns a possible connection in the ancient human past between Earth and Mars, which the writer postulates hosted a Human civilisation before it got destroyed in a cataclysm caused by a cometary or asteriod impact. Either there was a sister civilisation on Earth, or the remnants from the Martian one escaped and came here to start afresh, and thus Ancient Egypt was where they "unloaded" their legacy. He dated Ancient Egypt's legacy as belonging far back in the hidden mists of millenia untold, linking it to this Martian civilisation, instead of its "official" starting date of circa 3100 BCE. The "story" therefore is remarkable and astounding. But Hancock, in this book, also deliberately deconstructs his previous, equally remarkable and plausible ice-age theory for the destruction of such an ancient technological global, antediluvian civilisation for which he cites the theories of Charles Hapgood and others, and for which overwhelming evidence otherwise exists, transcending interdisciplinary boundaries. This theory was based on the Earth's cyclical axial precession as well as the related possibility of its crust shifting catastrophically, and was at the core of his "debut" book, "Fingerprints of the Gods". His new asteroid-impact theory is as equally as forceful as the axis-shift one he replaces, and such abrupt changes of view could cause doubt in the minds of his readers, even those with superior intellects and education who could reconcile both these aspects of view. He does touch upon this disparity of his on P.254 of the book, but cursorily and briefly.
He treats the example of the present day scarred and desolate planet Mars as a warning for what could happen to our present "high" civilisation now populating Earth. Elsewhere, he also speculates on a conspiracy by the powers-that-be to conceal what happened to Mars - and therefore Mankind's actual history - so as to be able to control their societies, which might otherwise become restive and panick stricken in the face of such knowledge and eventualities. After all, the elites are mature and powerful enough to be able to contemplate awful disasters coolly and in the face - which an ordinary Tom, Dick and Harry can't otherwise even think of, let alone bear! In the last chapter of this book titled "Dark Star", he writes mournfully to the effect that just as humanity seems to be lifting itself to superior levels of cultural, technological and spiritual expression, along comes a global cataclysm forcing them back to square one: to begin as mountain shepherds and hunters all over again, carrying with them the tales of lost Golden Ages of science and culture. This forces him to contemplate mournfully, along Gnostic lines, as to whether God is indeed all-good and love as the "classic" scriptures would have one believe - or whether "He" is a Duality: Evil as well as Good. He then supplies the answers, and so do his other excellent books which I recommend to Amazon readers, "The Lords of Poverty" and "Journey Through Pakistan". The influence of devilish forces aside, it seems we ourselves become The Devil when our lofty achievements get overtaken and harnessed to base desires and consumeristic greed, leading inevitably to some kind of disaster... That is evident right now, in this most critical time recorded Human history has ever known.
Good. Not Great. Just good........2005-09-23
I enjoyed this book. I had some problems with some of the odd logic he used in some areas, but I'd still favor this book as a good read. His "Sign and the Seal" book was far better.
WELL-REASONED ACCOUNT OF "THE FLAYED PLANET".......2005-08-29
This may be the most speculative of all Hancock's books, but he gives you plenty to think about. I wondered if this book would just be another rehashing of Richard Hoagland's ideas about the artificiality of the "monuments" of the Cydonia region of Mars, but instead it's pure Graham Hancock. He connects some dots from his previous books, looking again at the significance of the layout of the Giza plateau in Egypt as well as Teotihaucan in Mexico and speculating about whether the ancients have left us a message. It's a dire warning that our planet may be in for a pounding by explosive projectiles from space - the same dangerous objects that may have destroyed the planet Mars.
Hancock provides plenty of background on the swarm of comets and asteroids that are on Earth-crossing orbits and how they got there. It seems as our galaxy makes its great circle over millions of years it periodically encounters the galactic arm which is full of debris. Some of this debris remains with our solar system, but on unstable orbits. Comets, it turns out, can begin as huge objects many miles across. They generally break up at some point into smaller more numerous objects and work their way from the far end of our solar system to closer to the sun - and, of course, passing by Earth. And yes, comets CAN hit planets as we learned with the explosive impact of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on the planet Jupiter in 1994. One of the impact craters it left is larger than Earth!
Hancock explores the photos we have of Mars that show it must have had liquid water in its past. He gives us a complete summary of the structures found at Cydonia, including the famous face. Despite NASA's release of a picture that made the face look like a bunch of random scratches, the speculation of artificiality is very much alive. NASA was deceptive in releasing a "raw" photo, something they normally do not do. It is obvious they wanted to put an end to the public's fascination with the face. Even cleaned up, the photo shows an irregular structure that only looks a bit like a face. But the whole concept of Cydonia as a place with constructed monuments never rested solely on the face. There is the matter of the geometry of the area, which seems to have encoded a lot of the same numbers as the pyramids of Giza and other ancient Earth monuments.
In true Hancock fashion, the author provides us with penty of food for thought. He carefully labels his ideas as speculation, not fact, but he conjectures that the damage to Mars could have been recent, not millions of years ago, and it could have coincided with the great flood stories of Earth and an apparent disaster or series of disasters in the time frame of 9000 to 12,000 years ago. These may have involved a scattering of comets and other space objects that are still a danger to Earth; that previous cycles of these swarms from space wiped out the dinosaurs and caused other mass extinctions on Earth.
Hancock goes on to speculate that disasters on earth may not be purely geological events, but may have to do with man's treatment of his fellow man and his respect (or lack of it) for his world. He laments that the nations of Earth are doing almost nothing to search the solar system for the danger that may be awaiting our home. Is it just hubris that makes up think we are the culmination of all previous generations of humankind? Or are we dead wrong, and is human civilization destined to experience cycles of destruction? Will our Mother Earth become a dead place like Mars? As always, Graham Hancock provides entertaining reading whether you buy into it or not.
Average customer rating:
- Classic
- Not Free SF Reader
- Arguably the greatest work of Sci-fi of the past two decades
- Some enjoyable moments. But not quite worth the time spent reading the entire book.
- A realistic portrayal of what a human expedition to Mars would be like
|
Red Mars
Kim Stanley Robinson
Manufacturer: Spectra - Bantam Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
United States | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books | 18th Century | 19th Century | 20th Century | African American | Asian American | Classics | Collections & Readers | Drama | General | Hispanic | History & Criticism | Humor | Jewish American | Letters & Correspondence | Native American | Poetry | Short Stories | Women Writers
Robinson, Kim Stanley | ( R ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
General | Science Fiction | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0553092049
Release Date: 1993-01-01 |
Amazon.com
The first novel in the astounding trilogy,
Red Mars chronicles the lives of the first arrivals to Mars. The planet that the settlers find is empty of life and many of the pioneers want to begin changing the ecosystem right away to be suitable for human life. But the purity of the stark landscape convinces some scientists that it should be preserved. The stakes are high and the players on both sides range from politically naive idealists to ambitious manipulators without discernible scruples. No one can be sure that "terraforming" the planet will succeed, but it is certain to change the face of Mars beyond recognition.
Red Mars won the 1994 Nebula Award.
Book Description
In his most ambitious project to date, award-winning author Kim Stanley Robinson utilizes years of research and cutting-edge science in the first of three novels that will chronicle the colonization of Mars.
For eons, sandstorms have swept the barren desolate landscape of the red planet. For centuries, Mars has beckoned to mankind to come and conquer its hostile climate. Now, in the year 2026, a group of one hundred colonists is about to fulfill that destiny.
John Boone, Maya Toitavna, Frank Chalmers, and Arkady Bogdanov lead a mission whose ultimate goal is the terraforming of Mars. For some, Mars will become a passion driving them to daring acts of courage and madness; for others it offers and opportunity to strip the planet of its riches. And for the genetic "alchemists, " Mars presents a chance to create a biomedical miracle, a breakthrough that could change all we know about life...and death.
The colonists place giant satellite mirrors in Martian orbit to reflect light to the planets surface. Black dust sprinkled on the polar caps will capture warmth and melt the ice. And massive tunnels, kilometers in depth, will be drilled into the Martian mantle to create stupendous vents of hot gases. Against this backdrop of epic upheaval, rivalries, loves, and friendships will form and fall to pieces--for there are those who will fight to the death to prevent Mars from ever being changed.
Brilliantly imagined, breathtaking in scope and ingenuity, Red Mars is an epic scientific saga, chronicling the next step in human evolution and creating a world in its entirety. Red Mars shows us a future, with both glory and tarnish, that awes with complexity and inspires with vision.
Download Description
Get
Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars for $13.47.
Winner of the 1993 Nebula Award for Best Novel
In his most ambitious project to date, award-winning author Kim Stanley Robinson utilizes years of research and cutting-edge science in the first of three novels that chronicle the colonization of Mars.
For eons, sandstorms have swept the barren desolate landscape of the red planet. For centuries, Mars has beckoned to mankind to come and conquer its hostile climate. Now, in the year 2026, a group of one hundred colonists is about to fulfill that destiny.
John Boone, Maya Toitavna, Frank Chalmers, and Arkady Bogdanov lead a mission whose ultimate goal is the terraforming of Mars. For some, Mars will become a passion driving them to daring acts of courage and madness; for others it offers and opportunity to strip the planet of its riches. And for the genetic “alchemists,” Mars presents a chance to create a biomedical miracle, a breakthrough that could change all we know about life... and death.
The colonists place giant satellite mirrors in Martian orbit to reflect light to the planet’s surface. Black dust sprinkled on the polar caps will capture warmth and melt the ice. And massive tunnels, kilometers in depth, will be drilled into the Martian mantle to create stupendous vents of hot gases. Against this backdrop of epic upheaval, rivalries, loves, and friendships will form and fall to pieces—for there are those who will fight to the death to prevent Mars from ever being changed.
Brilliantly imagined, breathtaking in scope and ingenuity, Red Mars is an epic scientific saga, chronicling the next step in human evolution and creating a world in its entirety. Red Mars shows us a future, with both glory and tarnish, that awes with complexity and inspires with vision.
“An absorbing novel.... A scientifically informed imagination of rare ambition at work.”
THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
“Promises to become a classic... This is epic science fiction in the best sense of the term—thoughtful, provoking and haunting.”
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
“A staggering book... The best novel on the colonization of Mars that has ever been written... It should be required reading for the colonists of the next century.”
ARTHUR C. CLARKE
“The best tale of space colonization—a lyrical, beautiful, accurate legend of the future by one of the best writers of our time.”
DAVID BRIN
Customer Reviews:
Classic.......2007-09-23
If you have read or are planning on reading this, do yourself a favor and read the whole trilogy! This is a classic Sci-Fi trilogy! I highly recomend it.
Not Free SF Reader.......2007-09-03
An outstanding novel. One hundred people are selected to go and establish a colony on Mars, and it looks at the physical, intellectual and psychological testing that is undergone to get into that group.
The main part of the book though is the travel and establishment of a base on Mars, and the relationships and conflicts that develop, particularly among the leaders of the group.
Research discovers a longevity treatment, and this has serious side effects on an Earth in crisis. Political factions develop on Mars on the best way to develop or not develop the planet, and whether to take any crap from the growing influence of Earth corporate power.
Arguably the greatest work of Sci-fi of the past two decades.......2007-08-16
I am just aghast at the number of non-five-star ratings this book has received. The answer probably likes in the sophistication of the particular reviewers who are underrating this masterpiece. I don't want to make this sound arrogant or patronizing, but the great thing about the Internet (and Amazon reviewing) is that anyone can review, while the awful thing about the Internet is that anyone can review. I'm not sure what else one could want out of a Sci-fi novel than what you find here. My guess is that those who dislike it tend to prefer space opera or pure adventure books. But if you have any capacity to read good literature this novel will almost undoubtedly knock your socks off.
RED MARS has been almost universally praised by Sci-fi writers and academics as one of the finest hard science Sci-fi novels in recent decades. Partly as a result of the influence of Philip K. Dick (my favorite Sci-fi writer, but someone who was almost completely uninterested in the "science" in Sci-fi but instead focused on metaphysical dilemmas), STAR TREK, and STAR WARS, Sci-fi has been less and less focused on science in the past few decades and instead has been more concerned with exploring questions like "what is real?" or adventure stories. Time was when the most denigrated form of Sci-fi was the space opera. Robinson's Mars Trilogy is the triumphant return of hard science in novelistic form. But RED MARS is far more than that. It is as political as it is scientific. I can imagine that a few of the people giving the novel low marks are troubled by Robinson's politics, which are further to the left than any prominent politician in America today. It isn't an accident that many Marxist writers, including Fredric Jameson, who Robinson thanks in the Acknowledgments, love Robinson's dystopian take on role of capitalism in forming the world we live in, either on earth (as in his Pacific trilogy) or on new worlds (as here in the Mars books). If you are a big fan of an unbridled free market capitalism (which by its very nature is utopian, in that it continually describes a world that doesn't exist, but insists could if only we would free the market from all political and social restraint) then this isn't a novel that will warm the laissez-faire cockles of your heart. This is capitalism as rapacious, inhuman, and imperialistic.
I find the epic sweep of Robinson's vision to be almost overwhelming. He balances almost perfectly scientific, political, social, and narrative concerns. His characters are both many and richly drawn. His Mars exists in a way that only rarely do Sci-fi writers make possible. I can't point to many writers who have made their imaginary world so tangible and believable. I don't have the scientific expertise to address the plausibility of the many terraforming and climate altering techniques and tactics addressed in the novels, but I never found anything in the book to be absurd or silly.
I loved the various components making up this book. And the characters are more developed and vivid than in most Sci-fi novels. While John Boone never really emerged for me as a believable character, many of the others like Frank, Maya, Nadia, the irrepressible Arkady, Ann, Sax, and many others did. Thanks to gene therapy that helps extend life by renewing the genetic structure of the body, many, though not all, of these characters make it into GREEN MARS or even into BLUE MARS. The trilogy itself extends over several decades. I can recommend few works of fiction as highly as I recommend this. But if you are looking for a great yarn rather than a great novel, look elsewhere. This probably isn't for you. But if you are instead looking for a truly great novel, for a trilogy that might represent the apex of Sci-fi writing of the past twenty years, do yourself a favor and read not just RED MARS, but the two other novels in the trilogy as well.
Some enjoyable moments. But not quite worth the time spent reading the entire book........2007-07-10
Pros: Robinson creates vivid images of life on Mars. For the most part, the technical aspects added an incredible amount of realism to the story. Which makes for the best kind of science fiction. I especially enjoyed the chapters that made the space elevator come alive in the imagination as we may never get to see it elsewhere.
Cons: His explorations into the sociology,sexuality, and psychology of his characters were often boring,always lengthy,and sometimes unexpectedly and disturbingly crass. (i.e. not for the kids to read)If that weren't bad enough,he also attacks Christianity of all types with a sledge hammer. Declaring it repeatedly as an archaic religion for a band of greedy idiots. All other types of faith are regarded as "interesting" and "progressive". Robinson could have introduced his ideas into the story without being so heavy handed and long winded. Unfortunately he did not.
A realistic portrayal of what a human expedition to Mars would be like.......2007-04-26
This book is about an expedition of 100 scientists from all over the world sent to colonize/terraform Mars for a permament human colony in the year 2026. These scientists left everything behind on Earth (they'll never go back), and they are chosen (after extensive pyschological testing) to go to Mars.
It doesn't have much action in the story. It is more a look at human behavior and actions, a plausible scenario of what could happen when you get a group of people together to colonize Mars. How they adapt and change to their new surroundings, the realization that things aren't the same as on Earth.
There is a lot of human drama and political/power moves within the group. Everyone has a different idea of how to go about colonizing Mars. Some, the geologists, want to keep Mars pure and don't terraform or disturb the planet. When it comes to society, some want to start fresh and leave all the human baggage behind on Earth.
The book is slow moving, and was a bit boring at times but it is an interesting look at human interactions within a group. This book is part of a trilogy. Green Mars and Blue Mars are books that come after this one.
If you have always been fascinated by Mars colonization stories, this is the story for you.
Customer Reviews:
It's The Red Planet's Time To Shine........2005-09-05
Eurocentric in the Mediterranean (meaning "inner sea" in Greek) in the sixth century discovered the human mind. "This discovery was undoubtedly the most fateful of all history...which would one day lead on to Mars." What Mount Everest and the Moon were to the 20th centruy, Mars will be to the 21st. John Milton wrote in PARADISE LOST: "Their wandering course now high, now low' then hid, Progressive retograde or standing still." Mercury and Venus are known as the evening and morning stars.
Mars, on the other hand, uses zig-zagging movements while Jupiter and Saturn are slow creepers across the universe. Superior planets are those in orbit beyond that of Earth; the Inferior are Mercury and Venus are closer than our to the Sun. Mars prances with grandeur and grace with its red color (for fire) which makes it stand out. Mars has a rhythm, a musical harmony, to its flight across the sky.
Mars is the outermost of the inner group and has a substantial orbital distance from the Sun, taking longer than Earth to complete an orbit -- almost two years. Mars' retrograde "loop" perplexed ancient astronomers. Most of the time, it moves eastward; when Earth speeds past on its smaller, shorter orbit and overtakes Mars, it appears to move retrograde ("backwards") until a distance away and the eastward movement resumes. Earth knocks it for a loop.
NASA's Mars Exploration Program uses robots to explore the planet, dispatched to sites where water could have been eons ago. Thick deposits of salt, likely formed when water evaporated from an ancient sea have been found. There is dry ice at the poles. Mars has seen ice ages leaving icy polar caps. Volcanoes have formed deep valleys and large mountain ranges. They have their own Grand Canyon of enormous size, so vast that it takes up one-sixth of Mars' circumference. The atmosphere is thin, about one-hundredth of that on Earth.
NASA names prominent landmarks; like the United States postage stamps, the features are not named after living people. One was named after the former Columbia shuttle commander. University of Tennessee astronomers who work in conjunction with Cal Tech's Jet Propulsion Lab named a mountain ridge Cumberland Ridge.
Through trials and tribulations, the scientists show strength in the face of criticism and bask in the glories of their successes in this exploration of Mars. In 1971, the spacecraft Mariner 9 started the deal. In 1993, there was a failure to reach Mars with the Observer which had a ruptured fuel line. Four years later, on July 4, 1997, the Pathfinder lander with Sojourner rover made its way to the spot where Viking I lander had explored twenty-one years earlier and sent transmissions for six years back to Earth. Then came the rover Spirit and Oportunity, robotic explorers to look for samples of rocks, soil and other materials to help us to determine if Mars had indeed been a planet such as ours in many centuries past.
A manned flight is in the not-too-distant future. In 2007, Mars will be in the Taurus border in the early morning sky, closer to Earth; the United Kingdom will have the best view that winter of 2007 and 2008 around Western Europe. In November of that year, it will be the brightest object in the late evening sky. On Christmas Eve, it will be as far north as it can be on the celestial sphere with peak brightness next to a Full Moon. What a sight! By February to mid-April, 2008, it will end its spectacular show. By the end of May, it is muted in the bright sky and, on December 5, 2008, it reaches conjunction beyond the Sun.
Come fly with me to the Heavens and observe all these happenings. It doesn't take an astronomer or a space ship to enjoy the wonders of the universe.
"The Mars we are trying to explore does not exist!".......2001-04-24
This quote by Mike Malin sets the scene for the study of the red planet, as dreamed and hoped by mankind - scientist and layman alike. Over the centuries, Mars has confounded our attempts to describe it in Earth-like terms and Sheehan and O'Meara do a grand job of describing the history of hopes, dreams, and disappointments as the reality of Mars is discovered.
The book is set on epic scale and almost any paragraph rings with grand prose. At times this can be a little overpowering, but the canvas of the Authors is, after all, the entire celestial sphere and the history of human endeavour!
For Mars nuts this is a must buy and is compelling reading. It won't be everyone's cup of tea but it is a vital step in understanding how Mars has disappointed us in the past and may do so again.
Of course, I must declare an interest. Bill Sheehan included some of my own stories about dry Mars in this compendium. I am honoured to be included as a postscript to the legends of Mars' history.
Book Description
Devon Island in the Canadian High Arctic is the world’s largest uninhabited island, a place the size of West Virginia nine hundred miles from the North Pole. In its center is the world’s only impact crater in a polar desert, a hole twelve miles across and almost a thousand feet deep formed by an asteroidal comet hitting the Earth 38 million years ago. Every July, two dozen scientists set up camp on the rim of the Haughton Crater, a setting which duplicates as close as any place on Earth the barren Martian landscape. It’s one of a handful of analog environments for Mars — places where the harsh climate, severe geology, and unfamiliar terrain mimic conditions of the planet. Its environment is so hostile that no one has ever colonized more than small areas of its coastline for brief periods, and it's where the NASA practices people on Mars.
Driving to Mars recounts William L. Fox's three trips to Devon, working with the NASA Haughton-Mars Project. This book tells why we explore, how we see the world, and how we see ourselves in it. The flip sides of a single issue will ultimately determine whether or not we can stay alive on Earth.
Customer Reviews:
Exploration, Science, and Art: Driving to Mars.......2007-06-17
When it comes to exploration, there's nothing like being there. Yet at some point, all explorers need to tell others what they have seen - as well as find a way to understand and recall the experience themselves. Exploration is pointless if it is not shared.
The first humans to explore new places would return home with verbal descriptions of where they had been and what they had seen. These stories would fade and lose accuracy with each retelling, yet they still had the power to inform and inspire. Over time, the invention of writing and art allowed these tales to take on a greater amount of clarity.
Soon, professional illustrators and then photographers would be enlisted. Accurate as these captured impressions were - they were just that: captured impressions - by someone else. Of course, the only way to get beyond that barrier is to go to these places and see things for yourself.
Yet even when someone makes the trip, they have to take in what they see before they can appreciate where they are. Some vistas and locations are so utterly alien and novel that explorers need a context with which to integrate what they see. And of course, even the most incredible adventure will fade over time in the mind of an explorer. As such recorded impressions also serve to aid one's own memory of events in years to come.
It is the process whereby explorers put new vistas and experiences into a context they can internalize - and then how these impressions are shared with others that fascinates author William Fox. This book chronicles a writer as he sees things for the first time. Yet it is also a book on polar science, astrobiology, planetary exploration, ecology - and art history. Weaved together as part travelogue - part natural history, these books are eminently readable. This book serves as a tutorial for anyone seeking to visit and explore other worlds.
As I was reading this book, I was reminded of the way the James Michener often opened his books so as to give readers a portrait of a certain place and time. Michener also sought to show how that place came to be over a broad canvas of history - covering thousands and (sometimes) millions of years. Fox also makes sure that you know who visited these places first - and how these first feats of exploration echo forward to the present day.
You also get a sense of the future in what Fox writes. It was little surprise to see such an influence given Fox's friendship with author Kim Stanley Robinson and the referencing of his books "Red Mars" and "Antarctica". People are learning as they explore. They also seek to apply what they have learned - here and off world.
In Fox's book you find descriptions of people who are often quite ordinary - yet in many ways are extraordinary, placed in utterly alien and hostile locations. In some ways how they adapt is unusual - yet they also bring a surprising amount of their lives back in the real world with them.
Yet despite attempts not to spoil the very location they have come to study, these modern explorers transform these locations (or at least small portions) nonetheless. This is an issue that concerns Fox - and it will be an issue that will face us as we travel outward from Earth to explore and live on other worlds.
The arctic offers many locations that are analogous to what we may find on Mars - and elsewhere in the solar system. In particular, Devon Island, home to the Haughton Mars Project (HMP) is such a location. While you can fly to the hamlet of Resolute Bay in an hour - and to full-fledged civilization in a few more hours, this logistics chain can be cut at a moment's notice - and you are left with what you have on hand to survive. The veneer of connectivity to the rest of Earth is much, much thinner here. That is part of the value - and the allure.
HMP base camp is located next to the 38 million year old Haughton impact crater in a polar desert less than a thousand miles from the North Pole. Devon Island is largest uninhabitable island on Earth and is located in a region visited by many expeditions in the 19th century in search of knowledge - and the fabled Northwest Passage. Past, present, and future exploration co-exist in this place.
Visiting Devon Island evokes some truly alien impressions on all who visit. Having spent two one-month stints there myself, I speak from experience. There are places where your brain has no problem grappling with the idea that you are on Mars. It is there where I first met Fox who was researching Driving to Mars.
Driving to Mars is focused on this one location - and the natural history that makes it a good analog for Mars. You get to travel with Fox - on ATVs, modified Humvee rovers, and leap frogging in Twin Otter airplanes as he traverses the island. His travels take him to various locations where astrobiologists and geologists seek to understand this place on Earth - and yet place it into the broader context of comparative planetology. You also get to meet people who are trying to figure out how spacesuits need to be outfitted so as to allow people to truly explore the surface of Mars.
As you roam across Devon Island with Fox, you meet a variety of characters along the way (yes, I am one of them) who come from a variety of backgrounds. Everyone comes to this island every summer to not only study the place, but also learn how to conduct scientific and engineering research in a remote, hostile other worldly environment. All of these people also need to take something back from this place when they leave - their recollections being one of the most important.
Reading this book, you get a very good sense of place - not just what it is like to be there - but also what it is like for current visitors to walk in the footsteps of explorers who came before them - and (in the case of Devon Island) the indigenous peoples who explored the area thousands of years earlier.
The core theme of this book is how people take in what they see and then how they convey the experiences to others. Having spent two months myself doing precisely that in one of the locations Fox portrays (Devon Island), I have to say that he has aptly captured what it is like to be there - and the process whereby those experiences get interpreted and distributed.
As I write this review, new pictures are arriving on Earth from Mars. One set of imagery comes from the rim of Victoria crater as the Mars rover Opportunity seeks to find a way down inside. Meanwhile overhead the newly operational Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has begun sending back stunning high-resolution images of Mars. The first color image to be sent back shows the stunning vista of Victoria from above - including a recognizable speck on its rim - Opportunity itself. Yet as stunning and enticing as these images are - they are being sent back to us by a robot - without a human context. It can't tell us what it is like to be there.
Right now we are exploring Mars by proxy using our amazingly resilient rovers. One day we will go there ourselves. Only then will we truly begin to know the planet in a human context. And when we do go there we will make the planet our own as we explore it, understand it, and then tell folks all about it back home. In so doing we'll always be trying to strike a balance between what it is we have come to visit, what we bring with us, what we leave behind, and what we take back with us.
If you want to understand the people who are trying to figure out how to do this - and travel to remote locations on Earth in order to do so, then I heartily recommend this book.
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New Light on Dark Stars: Red Dwarfs, Low-Mass Stars, Brown Stars (Springer Praxis Books / Astrophysics and Astronomy)
Neil Reid , and
Suzanne L. Hawley
Manufacturer: Springer
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 3540251243 |
Book Description
There has been very considerable progress in research into low-mass stars, brown dwarfs and extrasolar planets during the past few years, particularly since the fist edtion of this book was published in 2000. In this new edtion the authors present a comprehensive review of both the astrophysical nature of individual red dwarf and brown dwarf stars and their collective statistical properties as an important Galactic stellar population. Chapters dealing with the observational properies of low-mass dwarfs, the stellar mass function and extrasolar planets have been completely revised. Other chapters have been significantly revised and updated as appropriate, including important new material on observational techniques, stellar acivity, the Galactic halo and field star surveys. The authors detail the many discoveries of new brown dwarfs and extrasolar planets made since publication of the first edition of the book and provide a state-of-the-art review of our current knowledge of very low-mass stars, brown dwarfs and extrasolar planets, including both the latest observational results and theoretical work.
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- More Hilarious for Earth mother's than earthlets, but gorgeous
- A hidden treasure
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Dr. Xargles Book of Earthlets (Red Fox Picture Books)
J. Willis
Manufacturer: Andersen
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Imaginative Inventions: The Who, What, Where, When, and Why of Roller Skates, Potato Chips, Marbles, and Pie (and More!)
ASIN: 1842700677
Release Date: 2002-01-24 |
Customer Reviews:
More Hilarious for Earth mother's than earthlets, but gorgeous.......2006-12-14
This is english humour at its best! Dr Xargle is quite an affectionately, fluffy green Alien who teaches other aliens all about earth and the beings. While your children might not get the humour immediately, it is wonderful watching them slowly understand the humour. For instance earth grannys making wrappers for babies from the 'hairdo of a sheep'.
the illustrations are gorgeous with lots of little features going on in the background - they are richly coloured watercolours.
Sweet, fun, while your children might not understand immediately they know there is something more to it and really enjoy going back and looking at it to understand. EXCELLENT BOOK - in fact I would highly recommend all the Xargle books!
A hidden treasure.......2004-03-24
I had never heard of this book until it was given as a gift for my son. I have since shared it with every member of my family. It is a truly delightful book that is very well written. This story of an alien professor teaching his class about the strange lives of "earthlets" (human babies) must be at the top of anyone's list of children's books. (Although I have yet to find an adult who doesn't laugh outloud while reading it.)
Books:
- Practical Candleburning Rituals: Spells and Rituals for Every Purpose (Llewellyn's Practical Magick Series)
- Practical Financial Management
- Roswell High Series 1 Through 10: The Outsider; The Wild One; The Seeker; The Watcher; The Intruder; The Stowaway; The Vanished; The Rebel; The Dark One; The Salvation
- SCAR TISSUE
- Shadowrun: Street Magic (FPR26004) (Shadowrun)
- Shadows in the Starlight (Changeling)
- Smoke and Mirrors (The Smoke Trilogy, Book 2)
- Starman (Wayfarer Redemption)
- Straken (High Druid of Shannara)
- Succubus Blues
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