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The Billion Dollar Boy
 
 

The Billion Dollar Boy (School & Library Binding)

by Charles Sheffield (Author) "BY NINE-thirty, fifty full breakfasts had been cooked and served ..." (more)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 17.91 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Product Description

From Library Journal

In The Billion Dollar Boy, rich, spoiled, overweight 15-year-old Shelby Cheever is bored, so he convinces his mother to take him on a space cruise. Without proper preparation, and drunk besides, he accesses the node network alone to visit the Kuiper asteroid belt and finds himself hurtled 27 light years out to the Messina Dust Cloud, where he is rescued by a mining family. On the three-month journey home, Shelby must learn how to do for himself in an environment where his wealth and pampered status mean nothing. Another well-written coming-of-age adventure story in the new Jupiter series. For large sf collections. In the hard-science Tomorrow & Tomorrow, Sheffield explores changes in the solar system and the theory of a closed vs. open system wrapped around a tale of a musician's fanatical love for his wife. Drake Merlin has his dying wife Ana and himself cryonically frozen so they can be together once a cure for her disease is found. Several times over 15 billion years he is awakened only to find no cure and, one time, he accidentally causes Ana's death. But if the theory of a closed system is true and the universe shrinks, he and Ana can return to a point when she is alive. This fascinating story is recommended for most sf collections.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The second Jupiter novel apparently takes place in the same future as Sheffield and Pournelle's Higher Education (1995), one and a half centuries later and much farther from Earth. A spoiled, very rich teenage boy, Shelby Cheever V, accidentally passes through the interstellar travel nodes and ends up aboard a starship that mines interstellar gas clouds for rare elements. He quickly develops the skills to be a useful member of the crew, survives the perils of space and would-be kidnappers, and is thinner, smarter, and much more of a mensch by the time he is reunited with his father. Any resemblance between this plot and Kipling's Captains Courageous is almost certainly intentional. Sheffield skillfully puts his own stamp on the familiar elements, providing first-rate scientific and technical extrapolation, brisk pacing, and a more plausible depiction of his young hero's maturation than is typical of this sort of coming-of-age adventure. Roland Green --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Solid if unspectacular, May 17 2003
By E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Shelby Cheever is the kind of kid that everyone, at one point or another, has run into and wished they hadn't. Adapted from a story by Rudyard Kipling and now reprinted for a juvenile crowd by Starscape Books, "Billion-Dollar Boy" is solid if unamazing SF journey.

It's the future, when Earth is impoverished except for a tiny number of corporate big-shots. And Cheever heir Shelby has everything a boy could want and more: insane amounts of money, a staff to wait hand and foot on him, and a dimbulb mother who lacks the brains to tell him "no" sometimes. In short, he's spoiled rotten. And when he wants to take a space cruise, his mum says yes. Unfortunately, Shelby gets drunk on the voyage, and decides to take a small jaunt OUTSIDE the spaceship -- where he gets literally lost in space.

Fortunately, he's picked up by a mining vessel. Unfortunately (depending on your viewpoint) the family on board has never heard of the Cheevers, and they certainly don't believe that he's wealthier than all the miners put together. So for the first time, Shelby is forced to use his brain and his body, and pitch in on actual work. That would be fine -- until someone recognizes him, and plans a ransom demand to his father.

Like "Putting Up Roots," this book is not an amazing, groundbreaking piece of SF, but it's readable for both adults and kids. It has a pretty simple, straightforward plot: Go from A to B, where C will happen. And Sheffield does a good job of shifting Shelby from a bratty, overweight, obnoxious teenage boy to someone resourceful, skilled, and if not smart, then at least trying to be. The writing is fairly ordinary, with some good descriptions of life on a gritty mining ship.

This novel is far from flawless, though. One of the biggest problems is the technobabble that the characters launch into, or the idea that Shelby's smart "salt of the earth" dad would marry an idiot socialite and let his son run wild. Or, for that matter, how there could be a mere few hundred rich elite on Earth; why this is so is never explained, since that sort of scenario wouldn't last long.

Shelby is a pleasant oasis in a sea of kid characters who either know it all, or are just plain annoying. He's meant to be annoying, and the means by which he STOPS being annoying is what makes him interesting. Grace is a pretty good character, although I had trouble figuring out if she was a love interest or not. Most of the supporting characters are okay, not stellar, except for the dryly amusing Logan (a robot).

Despite the odd implausible points, "Billion-Dollar Boy" is a solid enough read, with a very flawed lead and a solid, action-filled story. Nice job.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Previously published as...?, Feb 25 2001
By David E. Siegel "-DES" (NJ/ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There was a not missing fromm thje copyright page: "This boook was previously published in slightly diofferent form under the title _Captins Couragous_ by R Kipling" This is a reteelign of the Kipling book with the most minor of changes to set it in space, even to the point of calling the smaller spaceships 'Dorys' and retainign many other terms and elemets which made sense in their original settign and don't here. Changing one character from male to female introduced a mild romatic sub-plot, and moving the festival scen from the end to the middle of the voyage was interesting, as was the added cloak&dagger sub-plot, but the original is still better.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A great story and a great lesson, July 27 2000
By Aaron Chester (Brookville, IN USA) - See all my reviews
Where "Higher Education" failed, this book succeeded! "Higher Education" had a great story line, some great observations about society and our education system, and it had some great science. However, it failed in providing a good role model for the teens it was trying to reach. The characters were profane and sexually crude throughout "Higher Education". This book provided a good role model and included all of the good things "Higher Education" had to offer. A great read for all ages!
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Great.
***High adventures, fast paced, and thoroughly enjoyable! Perfect for young readers, as well as, for adults. I highly recommend this one.***
Published on Mar 5 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars If you liked 'Higher Education' you'll want this story
Shelby J. P. Cheever is the only son to J. P. Cheever. On an Earth populated by a billion poor souls maybe ten thousand are rich. Read more
Published on Oct 31 1998 by roger@nightly.com

5.0 out of 5 stars Cancel the appointments, you won't want to put it down.
I liked "Higher Education", and I liked this one more. The plot of the story is rock solid, the science is impeccable, as usual for Mr. Read more
Published on July 6 1998 by lilgordo@mindspring.com

5.0 out of 5 stars I enjoyed it, AND my kids enjoyed it.
One of the reasons I loved reading science fiction as a kid was the spirit of adventure and exploration that sci-fi offered. Read more
Published on July 1 1997

3.0 out of 5 stars For the boy who gets what he wants, not what he needs.
In the Jupiter Novels, Tor Books has good intentions and bold goals of presenting a new line of original novels featuring all the virtues of classic science fiction--fast... Read more
Published on May 12 1997

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