14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
The dangers of life in the universe, Jan 6 1997
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Killing Star (Mass Market Paperback)
A realistic answer to Fermi's paradox: "Why are They Not Here?".
A space-faring civilization will have ships travelling at
a good fraction of the speed of light. Such ships pose
a grave danger to any inhabited planet. Because of the
high kinetic energies involved, such a ship would wipe
out life on a planet, were it to collide with it.
In other words, a star-travelling ship is indistinguishable
from a planet-busting relativistic bomb.
What would a rational civilization do, given this scenario?
It would lay low, and pre-emptively strike against any
new neighbor.
The situation is not the same as the state of mutually
assured destruction existent on our planet. The first
relativistic strike is not traceable to the origin, and
is likely to be decisive.
The answer to Fermi's paradox? They are all hiding.
As for the book, it has an audacious style, which I like
very much. An action oriented book on a grand scale with
solid technical underpinnings.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wow! Maybe SETI is not such a good idea!, Nov 19 1997
By gould@neosoft.com - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Killing Star (Hardcover)
I read a lot. Quite frankly, most of what I read is trash. However, "The Killing Star" is one of a select few hard sci-fi novels I really, really, enjoyed. It is the only book I have read this year that I am still discussing with my friends. Get a buddy to read this book with you and the debate can be endless (i.e. a great choice for a sci-fi book club).The basic premise is that the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI) is frought with dangers. With some nicely done analogies and symbolism, the authors equate SETI to the the voyage of the TITANIC going full speed through fields of ice. Basically, the authors opine that any sufficiently advanced alien lifeform has no choice but to destroy any technologically advanced race it comes into contact with, so human beings should not be so eager to contact aliens by sending messages, radio communications, etc., into the deep reaches of unknown space. Why? Read the book. You will not be disapointed.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
King of Pop Destroys the World, May 18 2004
By Joshua Koppel - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Killing Star (Mass Market Paperback)
While looking for some hard science fiction I happened across THE KILLING STAR by Charles Pellagrino and George Zebrowski. This is hard science fiction at it's best. The novel comprises a number of cautionary tales and thumbs its nose at Carl Sagan and Isaac Asimov.
The book opens with relativistic bombs wiping out almost all life in the solar system. Relativistic bombs are missiles (just chunks of rock, really) that have been accelerated to a significant portion of the speed of light. Carl Sagan has stated that any advanced civilization that does not destroy itself becomes peaceful. THE KILLING STAR claims otherwise. I do not recommend this book to anyone that has paranoid tendencies. It is well written and frightening. So clearly frightening that it reminded me of THE HOT ZONE which is nonfiction.
Most of the book follows the few survivors scattered across the solar system and their efforts to survive after the cataclysm. Many interesting scientific studies and theories are brought up muck like in a goor Arthur C. Clarke novel.
So why do aliens try and wipe us out? Michael Jackson wrote a song about unity. Hordes of artists sang it. In 1985 every radio station on the planet broadcast it simultaneously. The song was We Are The World and the broadcast was the single "loudest" shout sent by us into space. Think about the song's message and the way it was broadcast. Read this book.