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The Fireball Trilogy #2

سرزمین تازه کشف شده

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Encountering a fireball which turns out to be a crossing point between their world and another one on a different probability track, two boys, one English and one American, face Indians, Vikings and Aztecs in their attempts to reach California. Sequel of Fireball.

152 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1983

6 people are currently reading
105 people want to read

About the author

John Christopher

197 books543 followers
Samuel Youd was born in Huyton, Lancashire in April 1922, during an unseasonable snowstorm.

As a boy, he was devoted to the newly emergent genre of science-fiction: ‘In the early thirties,’ he later wrote, ‘we knew just enough about the solar system for its possibilities to be a magnet to the imagination.’

Over the following decades, his imagination flowed from science-fiction into general novels, cricket novels, medical novels, gothic romances, detective thrillers, light comedies … In all he published fifty-six novels and a myriad of short stories, under his own name as well as eight different pen-names.

He is perhaps best known as John Christopher, author of the seminal work of speculative fiction, The Death of Grass (today available as a Penguin Classic), and a stream of novels in the genre he pioneered, young adult dystopian fiction, beginning with The Tripods Trilogy.

‘I read somewhere,’ Sam once said, ‘that I have been cited as the greatest serial killer in fictional history, having destroyed civilisation in so many different ways – through famine, freezing, earthquakes, feral youth combined with religious fanaticism, and progeria.’

In an interview towards the end of his life, conversation turned to a recent spate of novels set on Mars and a possible setting for a John Christopher story: strand a group of people in a remote Martian enclave and see what happens.

The Mars aspect, he felt, was irrelevant. ‘What happens between the people,’ he said, ‘that’s the thing I’m interested in.’

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5 stars
27 (15%)
4 stars
60 (34%)
3 stars
70 (40%)
2 stars
11 (6%)
1 star
5 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Stuart Smith.
285 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2021
John Christopher never disappoints. Not his best but still plenty to enjoy. A satisfying 2nd installment to the Fireball Trilogy that leaves me eager to finish the story.
Profile Image for Amanda.
257 reviews23 followers
March 18, 2014
Follow-up to "Fireball." The boys have set sail from Rome and landed in bizarro North America, a place inhabited by Vikings, Aztecs, and native Americans. They move through the continent trying to find a suitable society where they can live without being killed. (Each society in turn presents significant challenges to this simple desire).

In the Aztec city they begin participating in the arena of a competitive sport -- if they win the tournament they will be rich, celebrities, free to live and roam as they choose. This seems a promising solution to their problems and as they say repeatedly, "What have we got to lose?" From the wisdom of my perch as Reader, I know that in fact they have something very important to lose, and so I know that the delivery of those words is meant to make me squirm.

I agree with other readers that, thus far, this trilogy is weaker than John Christopher's others (Tripods, Sword of Spirits), but I am still delighted to be reading it. Shockingly, a strong female character is introduced in this book, but she then develops (degrades?) into an annoying, cloying, girl that the boys are quickly eager to be free of. What is with you J.C.??!

I am eager to read the finale, "Dragon Dance" as soon as I order a used copy online. Thank goodness for the internet, making available such out of print gems.
Profile Image for David Nichols.
Author 4 books89 followers
November 13, 2019
The sequel to Christopher's 1981 novel FIREBALL, NEW FOUND LAND is set in an alternate history where the Roman Empire never fell and Europe never colonized the Western Hemisphere. Simon and Brad, the quarrelsome cousins who stumbled upon this world in the previous book, here embark with two Roman companions across North American, headed for California. On the way they encounter hard-bargaining Algonquian hunters, a strangely-serene Viking colony on Nantucket, and the outlying cities of a greatly-enlarged Aztec Empire. The theme of an alternate America-without-Columbus has been developed more skillfully by other authors, notably Somtow Sucharitkul and Howard Waldrop, but Christopher's novel is a quick read, with believable characters and an intriguing denouement. Also of note is the author's treatment of the Aztecs as a sophisticated mercantile society, rather than the bloodthirsty barbarians of nineteenth-century American myth.
Profile Image for Mary.
516 reviews59 followers
December 31, 2013
This is the second book of Fireball trilogy by John Christopher. In this book the boys and a couple of friends stumble through the fireball (time machine) and land in America. An America that had no Columbus and no European colonization. They wander across the country to find a safe group to join--very interesting groups and alternative histories along the way. These are not John Christopher's best books but I enjoyed this young adult book and am hoping to find the third in the trilogy.
Profile Image for Reihane.
74 reviews30 followers
November 8, 2013
سه و نیم
از جلد اول پخته تر بود و اکشن تر. کلاً آثار کریستوفر خوبن. اما این اثر بیشتر به بخشی از تاریخ پرداخته بود که اطلاعی زیادی ازش نداشتم. پس برام اون قده به اندازه ی سه پایه ها گیرا نبود. اما در کل خوب بود و به نظرم برای بچه های زیر سیزده سال خیلی هم خوب و جذاب باشه.
Profile Image for Karin Jäger.
Author 26 books
March 11, 2024
​​Inhalt:
​​Im zweiten Teil der Trilogie von der Feuerkugel ziehen Simon, Brad, Bos und Curtius durch Amerika. Man muss den ersten Teil nicht gelesen haben. Denn die Vorgeschichte wird kurz erklärt: Simon und Brad sind 1981 in England von einer Feuerkugel in eine Parallelwelt befördert worden, in der das Römische Reich nie zu Ende ging. Nachdem sie dafür gekämpft hatten, dass dies nun letztendlich geschieht und die Christen die Macht übernehmen, stellte sich das Ergebnis als viel schlimmer heraus, und gemeinsam mit zwei Mitstreitern floh man in das von Europa unentdeckte Amerika. Der zweite Teil setzt einige Monate später ein, nachdem die kleine Gruppe ersten, friedlichen Kontakt mit einer Gruppe Algonkin-Indianer gemacht hatte. Man stellt fest, dass deren Gastfreundschaft begrenzt und die Kaufkraft von Glasperlen und ähnlichem Plunder rasch verfallen ist. Auf der Suche nach einem neuen Zuhause begegnet die Gruppe zwei weiteren Kulturen: einer Gruppe von Wikingern, die seit 1.000 Jahren auf einer Insel lebt, und den Azteken, die in dieser Parallelwelt ihren Herrschaftsbereich nach Nordamerika ausdehnen konnten.

​Bewertung:
Auch dieser Roman beschäftigt sich damit, Zivilisationen in ihrer Verschiedenheit darzustellen. So manches Mal wird die Gruppe davon überrascht, wie unterschiedlich die Menschen denken. Selbst der schlaue Brad trifft falsche Interpretationen und kommt zu manchem Trugschluß. Dadurch und weil Reisen mit einfachsten Mitteln gefährlich ist, kommt es immer wieder zu brenzligen Situationen. Es ist ein abenteuerlicher Roman, in dem viel geschieht. Als Leser*in wird man von den Vorfällen und Reaktionen überrascht. Das Tempo ist hoch und meist bleibt die Darstellung der Kulturen an der Oberfläche. Es ist sicher eher ein Abenteuerroman, der mit etwas Historie ausgeschmückt ist, als ein Historienroman. Andererseits macht bereits der Klappentext klar: Es geht um eine Parallelwelt. Somit kann es auch nicht wirklich ein Historienroman sein. Mir hat das meistens sehr gut gefallen. Nur die Details eines Spiels, das wie ein Mittelding aus Tennis und Basketball wirkt, waren mir eine Spur zu viel. Andererseits wurde das Spiel selbst, der Wettkampf, spannend dargestellt. An ein oder zwei Stellen konnte ich nicht richtig mitgehen. Wie im ersten Band wurde dort etwas, das zuvor mit viel Verbissenheit und Einsatz verfolgt wurde, plötzlich aufgegeben. Das war für mich schlecht nachzuvollziehen. Ebenso warum Brad und Simon eigentlich zusammenbleiben. Denn ihre Rivalität wird auch im zweiten Teil fortgesetzt. Wieder gibt es eine Mädchen, in das sich beide verlieben. Und wieder neidet Simon Brad die Rolle des Anführers, die dieser wegen seiner vielen Kenntnisse und Begabungen meist einnimmt. Leider erfährt man wenig über das Innenleben der übrigen Figuren, während die Geschichte aus dem Blickwinkel von Simon erzählt wird. Von ihm erfährt man auch die schlechten Gedanken, den Mangel an Motivation und seine Trägheit. Andererseits ist er oft auch jemand, der dies überwindet und trotzdem handelt, was ihn sympathisch macht. Das Ende ist, wie bereits im ersten Teil, offen und deutet an, in welche Richtung die Abenteuer des letzten Teils führen werden. Zusammengefasst vergebe ich vier Sterne für dieses Buch.
Profile Image for Mark.
212 reviews2 followers
October 3, 2018
it was ok. no where near the caliber of The Guardians or The Lotus Caves. A bit flat. Not bad, just ok.
Profile Image for Metaphorosis.
982 reviews63 followers
September 29, 2019
3 stars, Metaphorosis Reviews

Summary
Two boys in an alternate universe, having traveled across the Atlantic to the New World, now find themselves setting off again, this time across North America, with two companions from the Roman Empire and a young Viking girl.

Review
Again, Christopher races through. I take it now that his objective is to have the kids go all the way around the world by the end of the trilogy. The characters are interesting, but the pace is too rapid to really enjoy the journey. No sooner do they reach any place than they're on their way to another, and we never really settle in. Christopher's alternate civilizations are fairly thinly sketched in, and generally resemble their historical analogues, with very little technological or cultural development. Native Americans are as they were. The Inca, Aztecs, and Maya have merged, but not developed. The two boys follow each other, but for no clear reason.

I've always been a fan of Christopher's young adults, but this is one of his least successful efforts. Smooth, but not satisfying.
Profile Image for Kimbolimbo.
1,335 reviews17 followers
December 4, 2010
I know I read this book but I didn't seem to record it on my bookshelves. It is the second in the Fireball series. Very boring series compared to his other books. But I figure I might as well finish this series because I want to read all of John Christopher's books. I picked up the last one in this series at the thrift store so I guess I'll pick that one up soon to see what happens next.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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