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RED GENESIS
  

RED GENESIS [Mass Market Paperback]

S.K. Sykes
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Library Journal

The first two entries in a new series that "couples a complete science fiction novel with a related article about cutting-edge scientific phenomena" deal respectively with two of sf's most enduring themes: the fascination with Mars and first contact with alien intelligence. Sykes's story of a corporate genius exiled to the red planet as part of a cruel but arguably necessary experiment transcends its "hook" to become a powerful study of one man's triumph over adversity. The accompanying essay by MIT professor Eugene Mallove realisticially views the obstacles surrounding any attempt to colonize Mars. Challenging the premise that humans and aliens can learn from each other, Leigh's novel describes an encounter in space with a civilization based on the inability to willfully lie. Mathematician/sf writer Rudy Rucker's companion essay offers an invigorating commentary on the current search for extraterrestrial life. Featuring introductions by the ever-prolific Isaac Asimov, both novels exhibit uniformly high standards; the essays are well written, but nonintegral extras. Recommended for libraries seeking to fill a demand for quality sf.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A public apology to Sandy Sykes. :), Dec 11 2001
By 
Robert P. Beveridge "xterminal" (Lakewood, OH) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: RED GENESIS (Mass Market Paperback)
S. C. Sykes, ed Genesis (Bantam, 1991)


Back in the day, when I was living in a small and godawfully boring suburb of Philadelphia, I used to go to a weekly series of poetry readings, get besotted, and rant. One of the other hardcore attendees was Sandy Sykes, a wonderful lady who had just completed and published a science fiction novel called Red Genesis, intended to launch a new arm of Bantam's science fiction wing, Spectra, called The New Wave. I'm not much of a science fiction fan, the last piece of hard sci-fi I actually finished and enjoyed being Greg Bear's Eon all those years ago, and so the copy I got from her ended up languishing on the to-be-read pile for almost ten years.

Sandy, if you're out there, here's my public apology. Mea culpa maxima, because here's the answer to your inscription: you'd have to have liked my poetry an awful lot for you to have appreciated it as much as I liked this book.

Red Genesis is the story of Graham Kuan Sinclair, a corporate bigwig as the book opens, whose slightly unethical dumping practices combine with the more unethical dumping practices of companies decades before him to create something very nasty. Nasty enough, in fact, to kill three and a half billion people. While it's pretty well established that Sinclair isn't at fault for what companies that were bankrupt before his birth did, his actions were the straw that broke the camel's back, and the courts impose a novel punishment on him-- Sinclair is banished. To Mars.

By this point in human development, Mars is colonized, albeit by small, rival groups that have little to do with one another. Not being skilled in anything except running corporations, Sinclair would seem to be at a disadvantage in a place where everyone's got some kind of marketable skill. But through the friendships he makes along the way, he finds himself more effective than he ever imagined he could be.

Pretty standard sci-fi stuff, no? But the characters are drawn so well, and the emotional bonds between them are so accurately portrayed, that it's impossible not to get involved in what's going on. And by the time the (completely unexpected, by the way) climax of the book comes around, it's devastating.

Could it have been even better? Good question. I could have done without the Asimov-penned preface (dry recitations of facts-- come to think of it, rather like most Asimov novels I've tried), and while the afterword by MIT prof Eugene Mallove is more engaging than Asimov's preface, it pales in comparison to the novel itself. Skip them both and get straight into the meat of the thing. It's only halfway through January of 2001, but I've already found one book that's a shoo-in for the year's ten-best list.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Facinating Plot, Harshness of Environment, Human Adaptablity, Sep 6 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: RED GENESIS (Mass Market Paperback)
The begining of this book is eerily real, with an environmental disaster, and corporate sculduggery. What makes the book shine is it's portrayal of the main character, and his drive to survive and find purpose. The descriptions of Mars are real enough to feel gritty and the plot has enough suprises to keep you from putting down the book before the story is done. This is not a "series" book but a stand-alone that does the trick. A terrific first novel and eagerly awaiting another book by this author!
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Facinating Plot, Harshness of Environment, Human Adaptablity, Sep 6 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: RED GENESIS (Mass Market Paperback)
The begining of this book is eerily real, with an environmental disaster, and corporate sculduggery. What makes the book shine is it's portrayal of the main character, and his drive to survive and find purpose. The descriptions of Mars are real enough to feel gritty and the plot has enough suprises to keep you from putting down the book before the story is done. This is not a "series" book but a stand-alone that does the trick. A terrific first novel and eagerly awaiting another book by this author!

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A public apology to Sandy Sykes. :), Dec 11 2001
By Robert P. Beveridge "xterminal" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: RED GENESIS (Mass Market Paperback)
S. C. Sykes, Red Genesis (Bantam, 1991)


Back in the day, when I was living in a small and godawfully boring suburb of Philadelphia, I used to go to a weekly series of poetry readings, get besotted, and rant. One of the other hardcore attendees was Sandy Sykes, a wonderful lady who had just completed and published a science fiction novel called Red Genesis, intended to launch a new arm of Bantam's science fiction wing, Spectra, called The New Wave. I'm not much of a science fiction fan, the last piece of hard sci-fi I actually finished and enjoyed being Greg Bear's Eon all those years ago, and so the copy I got from her ended up languishing on the to-be-read pile for almost ten years.

Sandy, if you're out there, here's my public apology. Mea culpa maxima, because here's the answer to your inscription: you'd have to have liked my poetry an awful lot for you to have appreciated it as much as I liked this book.

Red Genesis is the story of Graham Kuan Sinclair, a corporate bigwig as the book opens, whose slightly unethical dumping practices combine with the more unethical dumping practices of companies decades before him to create something very nasty. Nasty enough, in fact, to kill three and a half billion people. While it's pretty well established that Sinclair isn't at fault for what companies that were bankrupt before his birth did, his actions were the straw that broke the camel's back, and the courts impose a novel punishment on him-- Sinclair is banished. To Mars.

By this point in human development, Mars is colonized, albeit by small, rival groups that have little to do with one another. Not being skilled in anything except running corporations, Sinclair would seem to be at a disadvantage in a place where everyone's got some kind of marketable skill. But through the friendships he makes along the way, he finds himself more effective than he ever imagined he could be.

Pretty standard sci-fi stuff, no? But the characters are drawn so well, and the emotional bonds between them are so accurately portrayed, that it's impossible not to get involved in what's going on. And by the time the (completely unexpected, by the way) climax of the book comes around, it's devastating.

Could it have been even better? Good question. I could have done without the Asimov-penned preface (dry recitations of facts-- come to think of it, rather like most Asimov novels I've tried), and while the afterword by MIT prof Eugene Mallove is more engaging than Asimov's preface, it pales in comparison to the novel itself. Skip them both and get straight into the meat of the thing. It's only halfway through January of 2001, but I've already found one book that's a shoo-in for the year's ten-best list.
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