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Probability Moon
 
 

Probability Moon (Mass Market Paperback)

by Nancy Kress (Author) "When Enli came outside at sunrise, her flower beds had been destroyed ..." (more)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Earth is an environmental disaster area when humanity gains new hope: a star gate is discovered in the solar system, built by a long-gone alien race. Earth establishes extrasolar colonies and discovers alien races--including the warlike Fallers, the only spacefaring race besides humans. Mysterious, uncommunicative, and relentlessly bent on humanity's extinction, the Fallers have mastered the star gates, and are closing in on earth.

Dr. Bazargan commands the scientific team sent to a newly discovered world to study its humanoid natives: beings who literally perceive only one reality. To lie is to be unreal--and condemned to death. The humans must flee for their lives across the unknown planet when they and the aliens learn the scientific mission is a lie. It's the cover for a secret military exploration of the moon Tas, which is another artifact of the gate-makers: a superweapon capable of annihilating all life in a star system, and already known to the Fallers.

Nancy Kress has won the Hugo, the Sturgeon, and three Nebula Awards. She is justly acclaimed as a literary SF writer, but receives little acknowledgement that her work is hard SF. Probability Moon should change this, winning her many new readers while pleasing her fans. It's a rare and desirable hybrid: a literary, military, hard-SF novel. Set in the same world as her Nebula- and Sturgeon-winning novelette, "Flowers of Aulit Prison," Probability Moon is the first book of a trilogy, but it has a self-contained story line. The sequel, Probability Sun, will appear in 2001, and the concluding book will be The Fabric of Space. --Cynthia Ward --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

Best known for novels that carefully extrapolate near-future medical and social trends, Kress (Stinger) here tells a tale of interplanetary adventure centered in anthropology and physics. Humanity has begun to explore the stars using "space tunnels" created by an unknown alien race. Life turns out to be common on other planets, but surprisingly, most of it is related to us, the products of an experiment carried out by the race that built the tunnels. Only one truly alien species, the Fallers, has been discovered, and they are implacably hostile to humanity. As the novel opens, Earth has sent a starship to a planet whose inhabitants call it World. The expedition's ostensible purpose is anthropological, to study the natives' unique psychic "shared reality," a complex net of mutual understandings that makes lying and large-scale violence virtually impossible. In actuality, however, the expedition has a darker purpose. Earth's military forces have discovered that one of World's moons is an artifact apparently left by the creators of the tunnels, and they think it may be a powerful weapon to use against the Fallers. As the military probe the artifact, the anthropologists on the planet begin to realize the trouble they'll be in if they can't convince the usually peaceful natives that both groups share the same reality. Kress does a good job of working out the ramifications of her shared-reality society, but her human characters lack the depth of those in her best work, the Beggars trilogy; her military figures in particular are thinly drawn. And the physics, although interesting, is introduced in large, sometimes indigestible chunks that slow the plot to a crawl. This is solid SF, but Kress has written better. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
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1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars An entertaining read, Sep 23 2003
By ZombiKitty "zombikitty" (Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA) - See all my reviews
Although the plot of Probability Moon had elements in it that have been done before in science fiction, they were brought together in a way that I found to be fresh and engaging through the different points of view of the various characters --- including the alien characters. Kress' writing style is clear and her prose does not get in the way of the story and the characters, though not all totally three dimensional, were, for the most part, fleshed out nicely. I especially enjoyed the character of Enli, the Worlder who has to spy on the humans in order to atone for her crime and become "real" again so she can again truly be an insider in her culture. I also liked the fact that the plot was driven by a combination of physics and anthropology, a usually uneasy marriage of disciplines. Many previous reviewers obviously did not care for the book, but I liked it and will read more of her work, including the sequel Probability Sun. So there.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Not your average predictable SF novel, Jan 18 2003
By A Customer
Not sure why some reviewers wrote so negatively, I think this is a very good book. It has a good and well developed story line that doesn't follow the Science Fiction receipe for the puny hero who defeats the omnipotent/all powerful villian by the virtue of his/her humanity and a lot of luck.

Instead, there are a handful of everyday Joes, each with different strengths and weaknesses, that are basically in over their heads and the ultimate result is... well... failure, but not defeat! That is what is so great about the story! We can't win all the battles, but we never give up the fight! Maybe not the most romantic storyline, but Kress makes it work. I am alway looking for a good SF story that breaks the mold and Kress delivered.

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2.0 out of 5 stars A pastiche of SF cliches, Jan 18 2003
By A Customer
This is a sorry comedown from the quality of Kress's first work, although if you think of it as aimed at adolescents who are new to SF, it might be reasonable for them. It has one good idea; after that it's full of cliches. Here's a partial list:
o A simple, agrarian, quasi-human race who are unsophisticated, but morally far superior to the humans.
o Deep dark secrets of same simple agrarian race.
o Ancient mysterious object which turns out to be - oh horror! - a super-weapon from a destroyed civilization.
o Mysterious xenophobic race which attacks humans on sight.
o Team of anthropologist Earthlings.
o Spoiled Rich Boy (SRB) on his first anthro field trip.
o SRB falls in love with Simple Agrarian Female (SAF). Humans cannot interbreed with SAFs, but....
o SRB decides there is a conspiracy he alone can overcome.
o Anthro team is headed by philosophical old man (POM). POM has a deep secret which almost destroys him in a crisis.

And so forth. If you've never read these before, perhaps this would be a good book for you, but each cliche has been done better elsewhere (and been imitated enough to become a cliche).

This is Science Fiction, not fantasy, but the "science" is pulled from nowhere, and violates current theories. Perhaps if I read the 2 sequels, I would understand it better - but I'm going to save my money.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting hard science sf novel should win new fans
More accessible than the Beggar's series, Kress' latest series of novels deals with a number of difficult concepts. Read more
Published on Oct 21 2002 by Wayne Klein

2.0 out of 5 stars A disappointment from a great author
After the "Beggars" series, and her short stories, which I loved, I found this book to be second-rate Kress. Read more
Published on Sep 23 2002 by paul-davis

4.0 out of 5 stars A quick, entertaining read with some neat SF ideas.
"Probability Moon" is an easy read, much less challenging than Kress's "Beggars in Spain." The story takes place mainly in two settings: in orbit of the alien planet aboard a... Read more
Published on Jul 30 2002 by Evan Blaisdell

3.0 out of 5 stars A Shared Reality
Probability Moon introduces a neat idea: along with the standard forces of gravity, strong and weak nuclear forces, and electromagnetism, there is a fifth force, probability,... Read more
Published on Feb 12 2002 by Patrick Shepherd

2.0 out of 5 stars loose ends
this is no _beggar's trilogy_, that's for sure. the novel seemed hurried near the end-as if she had some deadline. Read more
Published on Dec 22 2001 by R. Razib

5.0 out of 5 stars Definitely worth reading
I slightly prefer Kress' Beggars trilogy, but this has strong characterization, interesting science, plot twists, a plausible almost-human society - you could do quite a bit... Read more
Published on Nov 16 2001 by quapprentice

4.0 out of 5 stars Better than the other reviews lead you to believe
I am glad that I bought this book and read it before reading the other reviews here on Amazon.com. I found both this and Probability Sun to be very engaging volumes. Read more
Published on Oct 16 2001 by Gretta Bartels

2.0 out of 5 stars A Missed Opportunity
Ms. Kress has created a unique alien culture, which shares a unanimous moral sense of right, wrong, and reality. Read more
Published on Jul 8 2001 by D. Salerni

4.0 out of 5 stars Flower power
Hugo and Nebula Award winner Nancy Kress (the "Beggars" trilogy and "Maximum Light") sets "Probability Moon" in a distant future in which humans... Read more
Published on Jan 3 2001 by Lynn Harnett

2.0 out of 5 stars Probable... DISAPPOINTMENT
This book was a disappointment. I guess I had high expectations, with the setup: 'ancient alien race leaves mind-boggling and useful technology, humans find it as their quick... Read more
Published on Nov 24 2000 by beachie

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