Imagine our future in the heavens, when humanity realizes its remarkable potential in the far reaches of the stars, where life strides the galaxies in myriad forms that defy all logic and expectations, where birth and death and the God of all things and beings and paradoxes meet on the edge of reality, in a far corner of the universe that is the source of everything and nothing. Imagine the journey to Mars, to the outer edge of the solar system and beyond. Imagine the next Ice Age, the ever-stiffening cool breeze blowing across the Earth whispering the end is near while our heroes roil in the redundant mux of red dirt and rocky canyons that is Mars. Imagine the loneliness, stranded on the dead planet alone with your thoughts, free of Earth. And you discover another form of life, and you receive a message from a faraway place that is distinctly alien, yet strangely familiar, and you begin to think that you’ve been on Mars before; you’ve seen it all before in another life. Then take a leap of faith against all odds, using a machine of your own making, and you journey to the far corner of the universe.
I won this book through a Goodreads First Reads giveaway, and since I have always loved sci-fi I figured there would be a good chance I would enjoy this book. Well, I was wrong. The core plot, the development of the first sentient AI creature, was great, but it was buried in a very dull narrative of the first manned trip to Mars. This novel, published in 2009, shows no awareness of the many Mars missions that had already been ongoing by the time this book came out, including landers that have been roaming the surface of Mars and sending back data for years. There is a peculiar scene near the beginning of this grand adventure where somehow the astronauts are having a drunken party with significant quantities of beer, on the orbiting space station, something that I doubt very much would occur in real life as a part of any space mission, let alone such a high profile mission as the first manned Mars mission.
All the scenes involving NASA or the US government seem unprofessional and unrealistic, as well, as if the author didn't really have much of an idea how professional politicians, media correspondents, or NASA professionals speak and act while working. As a rough sketch or draft of a novel, this book works well enough, but it reads as a draft, with too little emphasis on AI, the actual point of the novel's plot by the end of the book, and too much emphasis on sex, romance and political maneuverings by the US President's wife and the wife of the Mars Mission's captain. As written, the scenes involving the wives seem like they belong in a separate novel, and the monemtum the space scenes try to build fizzles each time the book shifts back to the wives. Since this book shifts gears so much, very little solid character development occurs, too, leaving all the characters flat enough that it is hard to care about any of them. And, since the AI creature develops out of a 'science' project that sounds more like a team-building art project, with no supporting development in the novel of AI concepts, it is hard to care about the AI creature either.
If this was a new book with the rest of the series still to be written I might be hopeful that more readers gave similar feedback in time so that the author could polish up volume 2 and end up with a decent set of novels following this one, but since it has been a few years and the trilogy is all published already, I am not sure I want to know how bad the rest of the series is. Maybe the sequels are better, though, now that we know that the point of book 1 was AI, not really Mars as such.
I acquired this book thanks to a GoodReads.com Giveaway. I liked it, but as a whole the climax came late and there wasn't any real resolution. Instead of 3 separate 300 page books, I am guessing, it would have been better as one large novel.
It could have used some better editing and proof reading. There were numerous sentences I had to re-read to figure out there were extra words that shouldn't have been there. It killed the momentum.
All that being said I will definitely be looking for some used copies of Vol II & Vol III today, the story just started to get good and then it came to an abrupt end.
If all 3 Volumes were in one hardcover, properly proof read and edited, for about $25-30... I'd give it 5 stars.
This book was given to me by Mr. Dresner having won a drawing. There were essentially two threads to the novel. The first was an interesting story about the NASA launch of the first manned flight to Mars. The second was confusing tale about the pilot's wife and spiritual advisor and their ongoing dialog about how the Martian expedition would lead the world to a spiritual awakening. While I found the sci-fi portion and its character development of the mission members very interesting, I was not at all enamored with the very overtly religious portion of the novel. It really seemed to be a reach for me. I will give the next story a chance just because I am interested in how the mission to Mars ends.
Not bad ,not great , it will be interesting to see where this story is going. A little too much jumping back and forth for my taste. I would rather have learned more of the difficulties of the trip itself than all the political stuff but it definitely held some interest and I will be reading the next one.
Good story, but it lacked substance and depth. Flat characters, thin site development. Typos. Still, the story idea was good enough that it made me think about getting the next volume. Maybe his writing will improve; he's new.