About six years ago, I casually picked up a Ben Bova book at my library and begin my introduction to this master of science fiction. I didn’t realize that the book was one in the middle of a twenty-three book series! It took over a year but I eventually worked my way through the entire series and became a fan of Ben Bova and the stories and characters in the Grand Tour.
Bova is turning eighty-seven in a few months so I imagined he was sitting on a beach somewhere with an umbrella drink, reminiscing about the one hundred and twenty-four books he has written. Apparently I was wrong. Ben Bova has just added book number twenty-four to the Grand Tour series.
In Earth, Bova picks up after the death wave annihilation of our planet has been averted. Humans, feeling pretty pleased with themselves, are settling in with the belief that all has been discovered and dealt with and that humans are the masters of the universe. Let me correct that, the human male ego has once again sprung up and they have decided that they are the top of the food chain.
While Bova has had some very good, strong, important, and intelligent female characters in his books he, like so many male writers of his generation, has too often left the big stuff to the male leads. Women are nearly absent from this latest novel. This is such a major departure from other books in the series I’m hoping there was a method to this madness. My thought is that this male only book was purposeful in order to put the blame for the excessive human ego, power grab, and empire building on the XY chromosome carriers. I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt that he made the main battle between good and evil exclusively between the male characters in order to focus on the need for a new male perspective and role model. Using that lens, I found the characters all too close to our current political and big business reality. The future Bova sees for humans seems to be built on our continuing to repeat the mistakes of the past.
Earth is not an example of Bova’s best work; there is less hard science than usual, his characters are more one dimensional than in the past, as mentioned there is a lack of strong female characters, and the plot is not as complex as in past writing. All that said, I did drive to a neighboring town to get a copy and I sat down and read it all in one day. Even one of Bova’s lesser works is still an entertaining and enjoyable read. If you are new to Ben Bova, please start your acquaintance with Powersat or another earlier book. If you are an old fan, you may agree with me that Bova’s thinking, like that of many of us, has been negatively tainted by the current political situation.
FYI - to the best of my research, the twenty-four books in The Grand Tour series are: Powersat, Empire Builders, Mars, Moonrise, Moonwar, Return to Mars, The Precipice, The Rock Rats, The Asteroid Wars, The Silent War, The Aftermath, Saturn, Leviathans of Jupiter, Titan, Mercury, Mars Life, Venus, The Return, Farside, New Earth, Death Wave, Apes and Angels, Survival, and Earth.