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Abandon In Place
  

Abandon In Place (Mass Market Paperback)

by Jerry Oltion (Author) "Six hours after Deke Slayton, the astronaut, died of cancer, his racing airplane took off from a California airport and never came down ..." (more)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Nebula Award-winner Oltion (Frame of Reference, etc.) delivers a packed premise that never achieves its potential in this story of a young astronaut who makes a subconscious bid to renew America's space program. Shortly after Neil Armstrong's death, a phantom Saturn V appears on an abandoned NASA pad and launches itself to the moon. After two such supernatural launches, NASA puts astronaut Rick Spencer into the next ghost rocket with orders to decommission its engines on leaving the atmosphere and hitch a ride home with a passing shuttle. Once in space, however, Spencer abandons his flight plan and with two shuttle astronauts and the help of Russian mission control lands on the moon. When Spencer and his team return to Earth, they learn to harness the psychic power of the multitudes who have been following their lunar flight on TV. Oltion tries to explore the minutiae of the science and culture underlying the space program and to investigate collective paranormal psychology; unfortunately, he succeeds at neither. Though the protagonists are NASA-trained astronauts, they describe the most remarkable phenomena in unscientific layman's language. For all its ambitions, this novel never manages to create a single fully fleshed character, much less reach the overarching mysteries at its heart. (Nov.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From School Library Journal

Adult/High School-Rick, a young astronaut in an aging Shuttle program, is mourning the loss of NASA's glory days of manned space exploration when he sees something impossible-a new Saturn V rocket blasting off from a derelict Apollo launch site long designated "abandon in place." Soon ghost rockets are embarking regularly from it. The space agency orders Rick to destroy the next Saturn, but he takes control of the mystery ship instead. With two other astronauts-his girlfriend and a Japanese scientist-he completes the ship's mission to the moon's south pole. The three return to the Earth as heroes, hoping their exploit has rekindled the public's dream of space exploration. However, the world is more interested in the occult nature of the event-especially when it becomes apparent that the odd voyage has awakened paranormal powers in Rick and Tessa. After a thrilling escape from the CIA, followed by a hilariously hyperbolic wedding, the couple settles down to explore their new psychic powers in a reinvented space program. Based on a Nebula Award-winning novella, this fast-paced adventure has humor, strong characterizations, sharp contemporary insights, and real vision. Equal parts hard science and ghost story, New Physics and New Age, it has a cheeky disregard for the traditional boundaries of the genre that will infuriate some SF fans as much as it will delight others. General readers with a taste for the unusual can also appreciate this yarn.-Christine C. Menefee, Fairfax County Public Library, VA

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Six hours after Deke Slayton, the astronaut, died of cancer, his racing airplane took off from a California airport and never came down. Read the first page
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3.7 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Abandon In Place, Jan 27 2004
This review is from: Abandon in Place (Paperback)
Some say that authors are taking the Science out of Science Fiction. Some say this is happening because Fantasy is "in", and SF is "out". They say this is happening because of Harry Potter, and The Lord Of The Rings--but also because the people of Earth were told that science and scientists promised us such a great future and that future was not delivered. Science--real laboratory-based, empirical, "let's make the world a better place for everyone on the planet" science, never happened.

So we get SF stories--lengthened into novels--like Abandon In Place, by Jerry Oltion, where a few mentions of quantum foam, and a cover-painting showing a lunar lander touching down on the moon, make the thing look like a hard-science novel. But it's not. It's perilously close to wish-fulfillment exercises like The Girl, The Gold Watch, and Everything, by John D. MacDonald, or Time And Again, by Jack Finney. And those are fantasy novels. The exhilirating effect of reading Oltion's hard-SF ghost-story--his just-imagine, gung-ho, dreamy look at how psychic powers might perhaps refuel humankind's desire for space exploration, with gifted individuals conjuring up moon-worthy spacecraft that can be ridden through the eternal vacuum as long as they don't fade away--is the same as a wish-fulfillment masterpiece like Grimwood's Replay.

Is there SF here, though? Well, I'll trust that the technical details regarding NASA's Apollo space program are well-researched and right. But the crux of the book--the author's passion for concocting this bizarre story--is very science-fictional. Oltion--using metaphor, if not outright mysticism, if not outright gobbledygook--is just pointing out that we will make it to the moon, again, and beyond, if we as a species want it bad enough. This concern has been blowing through SF for ages, as I see it; I flash back to Ray Bradbury's intro to Perry Rhodan #18, where he pleads with readers to remain enthusiastic about manned space flight.

As a novel--not an award-winning novella--Abandon In Place does roam in too many directions. Power-mad dictators who learn psi powers, not to dream up rockets, but to tyrannize the world; an ultra-liberal Pope who advises our main characters--Rick and Tessa, astronauts turned minor deities with vast mental powers fueled by public opinion--on matters of faith and world politics; King Arthur conjured from the aether as a new/old symbol of hope; the world's entire population learning how to tap the paranormal after the example has been set; a glimpse of the afterlife and the strange essences that inhabit it; oh, and car chases, daring escapes, and some spy games. Wow. Take a breath. It is definitely too much...but it's worth the experience.

Not a perfect book, because it is as unwieldy as it is compelling. Fascinating and frustrating. Better than some of its predecessors, like McQuay's The Nexus, but outclassed by Stranger In A Strange Land (there are numerous references to Heinlein's works, in Oltion's book). Well worth reading if you don't mind an SF experience that may not be one at all, while it addresses a fundamental concern of the genre.

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4.0 out of 5 stars engaging but weird to the moon and back parnormal SF, Jan 24 2003
By Harriet Klausner - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Abandon in Place (Paperback)
NASA is in deep decline especially looking back to its glory days of Mercury, Gemini, and the Apollo missions. As the astronaut and cosmonaut pioneers of space die, Elvis-like sightings are reported, but most rationale folks write them off as too much moonshine. However, when Neil Armstrong passes away, a Saturn V moon rocket launches from the Cape Canaveral pad witnessed by shuttle astronaut Rick Spencer. The ghostly spacecraft reaches Moon orbit, then vanishes. This phenomenon repeats itself several times.

Rick persuades the NASA brass to allow him to travel with the phantom ship, which takes him to the shuttle piloted by his girlfriend, Tessa McClain. Rick, Tessa, and astronomer-astronaut Yoshiko Sugano ignore their superiors and ride the ghost ship to the Moon with the Russians providing mission control support from earth. Rick soon learns that if he fears that the space program will end, the ship remains solid, but if he believes that the space program will recover, the ship begins to vanish. The team lands on the Moon and successfully returns to Earth only to have the CIA interrogate them to learn more about psychic powers.

ABANDON IN PLACE is a full-length novelization of an award-winning novella. The story line is exciting as Jerry Oltion uses New Age elements combined with scientific information tat tuns into an excellent paranormal tale. The novel is at its best during the space scenes, but loses thrust when the CIA enters the picture. Though the NASA leaders seem stilted, fans of preternatural science fiction will relish this weird to the moon and back thriller.

Harriet Klausner

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good story, but it's a little thin., Feb 5 2002
By "theamazonking" (Barboursville, WV USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abandon in Place (Hardcover)
Great story, but the first part of the book, first 200 pages went way to fast and let out a lot of info. Over all a good book.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars don't stop
Those reviewers who complaing about the second part of the book need to remember that reality is what you make of it ;)

Yes, it is true that you can clearly tell where the... Read more

Published on Dec 5 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars Abandon in Place
Fantastic, can't wait for Mr. Oltions next release.
Published on Nov 15 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Great fun for those not afraid of a book that evolves
Only a Grinch (and there apparently ARE Grinches) could dislike a book as stuffed with ideas, adventure and sheer fun as Jerry Oltion's latest. Read more
Published on Jun 6 2001 by mintonmedia

2.0 out of 5 stars Starts great, limps to finish line
This book is based off a short story that was rewritten as a novella and then finally a novel. It seems obvious to me where the original idea ended and the extra stuff was added... Read more
Published on Jan 20 2001 by Jason M. Diller

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting
Fantasy hasn't been "my bag" since I was about 14, and I've long preferred science fiction. Read more
Published on Oct 30 2000 by Dan Bailey

3.0 out of 5 stars Not Oltion's best, but a good one
Oltion may not be for everyone, but he can tell a decent sci-fi story. The story here (I don't want to spoil it with too many details), can drag at times but pays off in the end... Read more
Published on Oct 29 2000 by Julian Holm

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