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Voyage
 
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Voyage (Mass Market Paperback)

de Step Baxter (Author)
2.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (5 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 10.99
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Kennedy survived. Like many alternate history stories, that's the premise of Stephen Baxter's Voyage. But in Baxter's version of the past, that one altered fact is the propellant that drives humanity into space, beyond the primitive lunar landings of the 1960s. Spurred by a JFK who champions space flight and a Nixon administration that backs NASA, humans reach Mars in 1986. But this is a tragic tale as well as a triumphant one, for Baxter's relentless realism chronicles the perils of extended space flight as well as its glamorous achievements, making for a gritty, true-to-life story. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

From Publishers Weekly

With just a little bit of alternate history, Baxter's excellent what-if novel about a 1986 Mars landing accomplishes its mission. The premise is brilliant: at the time of the Apollo moon landing, President Nixon authorized a Space Task Group to define the post-Apollo role of NASA. In real life, Nixon's directive in effect ended manned space exploration in favor of the Shuttle program; in Baxter's novel, thanks to one major change in history, the green light is given for a manned Mars mission, the Ares program. Seen primarily through the eyes of Natalie York, the geologist on the mission as well as the first women in space, the road from Apollo to Ares is potholed with bureaucratic battles, technical challenges, an Apollo XIII-like disaster and constant fretting about the inevitability (and necessity) of sacrificing lives to advance the cause of science. Baxter, whose recent works include a wildly imagined sequel to The Time Machine (The Time Ships), peoples his story with main characters who are as authentic as his science. By contrast, the supporting characters-notably an ex-NASA administrator who gets religion-are sketchy and barely integrated with the plot. Even so, there's plenty of imagination on display here-and research, too, as Baxter invents not only a credible mission to Mars but also a credible technical, political and personal history behind it. Author tour.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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L'avis des consommateurs

5 évaluations
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2.2étoiles sur 5 (5 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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3.0étoiles sur 5 A somewhat flawed book about a manned mission to Mars, Fév 15 2004
Voyage, by Stephen Baxter, offers the intriguing possibility of NASA undertaking a manned mission to Mars in the 1980s instead of building the space shuttle. The book, however, suffers from a couple of flaws.

First, the narrative alternates between the years leading from the Apollo moon landing to the launch of the Mars expedition and the voyage to Mars itself. It is sometimes very hard to keep the two separate stories straight in one's memory. There is also next to nothing about what happens on Mars after the landing.

Second, Baxter totally fails to suggest that doing Mars instead of the shuttle would have any effect on society and history outside of the US space program. This is doubly puzzling because he basis his altered history on a John F. Kennedy having survived Dallas a cripple. (That premise may be one built on quicksand. Recent revelations about JFK's health problems and his private feelings toward space exploration make the idea of his physical survival into the 80s problematic, not to speak of his advocacy of a manned mission to Mars.) Regardless, the survival of JFK to be a kind of gray eminence of the Democratic Party would have been an interesting concept to explore, even without the space theme.

The story also has a bitter sweet air about it. Several Apollo lunar missions, as well as a number of unmanned probes such as the Pioneer and Voyager missions to the Outer Planets are cancelled to pay for sending people to Mars. And there is the faint whiff of melancholy that after humans return from Mars, there might be no further expeditions.

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1.0étoiles sur 5 Another good concept ruined, Déc 26 2003
Par Un client
This review is from: Voyage (Hardcover)
It's a good idea for a plot, and it certainly deserves better than the truly cringeworthy prose offered. I know nothing of Baxter other than this book, but it seems he's a much better technical writer than a prose writer. His charaters are truly cardboard cutouts, making their melodramatic internal monologues laughable.

The worst part is the frequent lapses into British English. Baxter duns us over the head, again and again, how NASA is chock full of cornfed Midwesterners and drawling Texans, then gives them dialog like "rubbish," "mucking about," and "pieces of kit." Right. The jacket copy touts how much research Baxter did to achieve technical authenticity. I'm sure he did, as the technical verbiage is often stultifying in its detail. I guess he didn't devote as much effort to dialogue.

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1.0étoiles sur 5 "Failed To Keep My Interest", Sep 6 2003
As a big proponent of a manned mission to Mars, I looked forward to reading this book. While Baxter's characters showed a lot of promise, the slow pace of the story and lack of any possible conflict failed to keep my interest.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 Great build-up to the big ending, and fizzz
This is an interesting book about how NASA might have gotten a manned mission to Mars by now. The story revolves around one very dedicated geologist, and her issuance into the... Read more
Publié le Juil 27 2003 par Charles G. Fry

3.0étoiles sur 5 Uh...Wow....I guess
If Tom Clancy is the "Tom Clancy" of warfare, Baxter may be his equal in Engineering. The book is written in near scholarly text when explaining the nueclear rockets, and... Read more
Publié le Sep 19 2002 par Carl W Womack

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