Would you like to see this page in English? Click here.

16 neufs & d'occasion à partir de CDN$ 1.03

Vous en avez un à vendre?
Vendez les vôtres ici
 
 
Marrow
 
 

Marrow (Hardcover)

de Robert Reed (Author) "... a sleep, sweet as Death. .. time traversed, and an incalculable distance ... and then a splash of light emerged from the dark and..." En savoir plus
2.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (27 évaluations de client)

Offert par ces vendeurs.


5 neufs à partir de CDN$ 6.96 11 d'occasion à partir de CDN$ 1.03

Les clients qui ont acheté cet article ont aussi acheté

The Well of Stars

The Well of Stars

de Robert Reed
Darwinia: A Novel of a Very Different Twentieth Century

Darwinia: A Novel of a Very Different Twentieth Century

de Robert Charles Wilson
3.2étoiles sur 5 (45)  CDN$ 12.37
The Accidental Time Machine

The Accidental Time Machine

de Joe Haldeman
4.0étoiles sur 5 (3)  CDN$ 8.99
House Of Suns

House Of Suns

de Alastair Reynolds
5.0étoiles sur 5 (1)  CDN$ 10.91
Watchers

Watchers

de Dean Koontz
CDN$ 11.32
Découvrez des articles similaires

Les détails du produit


Descriptions du produit

From Amazon.com

The Ship is a rock larger than worlds. The Ship is a world full of vast hollows in which live thousands of alien races. The Ship is a mysterious starship, billions of years old, crewed by the near-immortal humans who discovered it, empty, at the fringes of the galaxy. And, as a select inner circle of the crew is astonished to discover, there is a planet at the center of the Ship. They descend to the surface of the planet, Marrow, hoping to discover the origin of the Ship--only to find themselves trapped on that hellish world and abandoned by their fellow captains, even as tremendous, inexplicable changes in Marrow may doom the Ship and everyone aboard.

Robert Reed's Marrow is high-concept, epoch-spanning SF in the tradition of Olaf Stapledon's Last and First Men, Camille Flammarion's Omega, and Greg Egan's Diaspora. Unlike Last and First Men and Omega, Marrow features a continuing cast of well-drawn, believable characters in addition to the brain-busting big ideas and sense of wonder. --Cynthia Ward



From Publishers Weekly

A ship the size of a large planet drifts through space far into the future, setting the stage for Reed's sweeping allegory dramatizing such cosmological questions as the origins of the universe and the relative nature of size and time. Humans are practically immortal with the improvements of bioceramics and repairing genes, allowing Reed (Beyond the Veil of Stars), a multiple Hugo nominee, to track the lives of the Great Ship's crew members and passengers through millennia. The Master Captain has directed every aspect of the ship via her implanted nexuses ever since human explorers first boarded the seemingly empty, ancient vessel, finding the enormous, lifeless ship equipped with adjustable environments that would allow them to create oceans and cities. The human colonists turn the ship into a luxury passenger cruiser carrying 100 billion members of various alien species. The Master and her captains administer the journey according to plans made eons into the past, handily neutralizing any threats or disruptions until the Master mysteriously sends over 200 of her brightest captains, including her ambitious first-chair, Miocene, and the talented alien greeter Washen, on an exploratory mission to what was thought to be the ship's solid iron core. Disaster befalls their mission, unleashing a 5,000-year course of events that will build a new civilization and eventually threaten the existence of the entire ship. The ship itself narrates italicized introductions to each of the book's five parts with thorny, theatrical language, echoing the ship's obtuse, unwieldy presence. Clumsy dialogue and melodramatic scenes render the human dramas far less consequential than the monumental construct in which they play. However, Reed's ambitious, detailed premise and thoughtful manipulations of space and time make for an enjoyable reflection on the size and shape of the universe relative to its human inhabitants. (Sept.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Dans ce livre (les détails)
First Sentence
... a sleep, sweet as Death. .. time traversed, and an incalculable distance ... and then a splash of light emerged from the dark and the cold, its warming touch slowly explaining itself to me, showing suns and little worlds and great swirls of colored gas and angry, roaring dust. Lire la première page
En découvrir plus
Concordance
Parcourir les pages échantillon
Plat recto | Droit d'auteur | Extrait | Plat verso
Cherchez à l'intérieur de ce livre:

Associer des mots-clés à ce produit

 (De quoi s'agit-il ?)
Considérez votre mot-clé comme une sorte d'étiquette définissant parfaitement ce produit.
Les mots-clés aident les clients à organiser et trouver leurs articles favoris.
Vos mots-clés : Ajouter votre premier mot-clé
 

 

L'avis des consommateurs

27 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (4)
4 étoiles:
 (8)
3 étoiles:
 (4)
2 étoiles:
 (3)
1 étoiles:
 (8)
 
 
 
 
 
Évaluation du client type
2.9étoiles sur 5 (27 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
Partagez votre opinion avec les autres clients:
Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
1.0étoiles sur 5 Forced Myself to Finish It, Avril 15 2004
This review is from: Marrow (Mass Market Paperback)
This book had a reasonably good idea, but failed to keep my attention. I had to force myself to finish it. None of the characters appealed, and only the plot kept me involved. I had to know where it would end, sort of like watching a train wreck in progress...
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non (Signaler ce commentaire)



 
3.0étoiles sur 5 Super-science space opera, flawed but fun. 3.5 stars, Janv. 4 2004
Par Peter D. Tillman (Taos, NM USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Marrow (Mass Market Paperback)
_________________________________________

In the far future, humans discover a derelict starship the size of
Jupiter, out on the galactic rim, They claim salvage rights, get some
of the great ship's machinery running, and defend their claim against
late-arriving aliens. The ship is very old, perhaps as old as the
universe.... and big. Really big.

The new owners put the Great Ship into service as -- the galaxy's
grandest cruise-liner! All lifeforms and sentients are welcome -- if
they can afford the fare. By the time of our story, 50,000 years later,
there are some 200 billion passengers and crew aboard, a fifth of the
way through a leisurely circumnavigation of the Milky Way....

Then, a Mars-size "planet" is discovered, somehow suspended at the
very core of the Great Ship! A team of the Ship's best and brightest
officers are sent to explore the mysterious "Marrow" -- and are
stranded there by a wild energy-storm. Complications ensue, and

things, it turns out, are not as they seem....

Humans of this age are heavily gengineered, long-lived, tough and
very hard to kill. Indeed, the Master Captain, and many of her
officers, have served onboard since the Ship's commissioning. So
their perspective on long-term projects, and risk, is considerably
different than yours and mine.

This may sound like a Doc Smith adventure-story, and it shares his,
umm, non-rigorous treatment of basic science (but is much better-
written). Marrow works best as mind-candy science-fantasy -- the
grand sweep of events kept my suspension of disbelief intact until I
started thinking things over for this review. I usually find dumb,
sloppy science irritating [see note 1, with minor *SPOILERS*], and
Marrow suffers from this in retrospect, but I still liked the book. I
liked the the silly audacity of imagining a cruise-ship with 200 billion
passengers, on a quarter-million year voyage! I liked the peeling away
of layers of mystery from the Great Ship, only to find a new mystery,
then another. I liked the ambiguous ending, in contrast to the tidy,
often bathetic endings common to grand SF epics.

But -- you should be aware that Marrow is not to everyone's taste.
The plot isn't coherent. The science is, well, not. And the book
doesn't have a tidy wrap-up. One Amazon reader describes Marrow
as "the dumbest and most aggravating book I've ever read."
Another wrote: "I'm glad I bought it, because I had a long cross
country flight and it helped me sleep." P>And the great ship, with the mass of 20 Earths, is propelled by (fusion-
powered?) rocket engines -- a truly enormous mass to push around,
especially since most of it is dead weight. There seems no real reason
to build such a massive ship, except that Reed thought this would be a
Neat Idea.... as did Doc Smith.

And -- if the Great Ship really is the size of Jupiter, and masses 20
earths (Reed is somewhat vague about this), it would have to be
made of aerogel, as Jupiter masses 318 Earths....

review copyright 2000 Peter D. Tillman

Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non (Signaler ce commentaire)



 
5.0étoiles sur 5 They don't come much better than this, Aoû 28 2003
Par Un client
This book is the best kind of science fiction. A vast galactic future. People rendered nearly immortal by science. Probing an ancient and dangerous mystery. Ultimately a study in character. Can people change, if they live long enough?
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non (Signaler ce commentaire)


Partagez votre opinion avec les autres clients: Créer votre propre commentaire
 
 
Commentaires client les plus récents

1.0étoiles sur 5 Only read if the only other book you have is a dictionary
I have always been a science fiction fan, and even read the most boring books with atleast some moderate interest. Read more
Publié le Jui 30 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 Good Book for the Beach
This book is perfect for a beach read. The definition of a good read is a book you want to pick up the following day to see what happens next. This book fits that perfectly. Read more
Publié le Jui 3 2003 par Wordy

4.0étoiles sur 5 Flawed but compelling and exciting
No one knew where the gigantic ship came from or how old it was or who built it. It sailed the galaxies for untold eons before intelligent life forms discovered it. Read more
Publié le Fév 15 2003 par Daniel Jolley

4.0étoiles sur 5 Billion year old ship and other oddities
I liked this book even though I tried not to. The writing style was engaging and the pace never bogged down. It certainly was better than the Rama books. Read more
Publié le Aoû 15 2002 par Douglas De Bono - Author of No...

4.0étoiles sur 5 Enjoyable read
Marrow by Robert Reed is an enjoyable science fiction encompassing a lot of well known territory in the genre. Read more
Publié le Jui 11 2002 par Virgil

1.0étoiles sur 5 A SciFi Book with Bad Physics
Well, I've reached the end of Part 1 of this book (about page 70) and I'm not impressed at all. In the very first chapter, the ship is narrating its approach to the Milky Way... Read more
Publié le Mars 30 2002 par David A. Lessnau

4.0étoiles sur 5 Not bad, a bit rushed
I read everything Robert Reed publishes; but this book needed a little more proofreading and a little more re-writing. The ending was a bit rushed. Read more
Publié le Mars 12 2002 par Jim Molnar

2.0étoiles sur 5 Argggg.....
The first chapter is narrated by the ship and tells (briefly) the history of humanities discovery of it and how they came to be the sole rulers. Read more
Publié le Déc 27 2001 par Rob Willmore

5.0étoiles sur 5 Worlds within worlds
Marrow by Robert Reed is one of the best SF novels I've read all year. It is quintessential SF, full of brave ideas and bold speculations. Read more
Publié le Nov. 18 2001 par Alan Robson

5.0étoiles sur 5 Incredible
Marrow is like finding an oasis after 3 days in the desert. I love this book. I read it six months ago, but every so often, a piece of the plot swirls around the back of my head... Read more
Publié le Sep 28 2001 par Bruce R. Cordell

Rechercher uniquement sur les commentaires portant sur ce produit



Listmania!


Cherchez des articles semblables par catégorie


Chercher des articles semblables par sujet


Commentaires

Souhaitez-vous compléter ou améliorer les informations sur ce produit ? Ou faire modifier les images?

Votre historique récent

 (En savoir plus)

Après avoir visualisé des pages détaillées produit ou des résultats de recherche, regardez ici pour trouver une façon simple de poursuivre votre navigation sur des pages qui vous intéressent.