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Loading... Mars Plusby Frederik Pohl, Thomas T. Thomas (Author)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I felt like this was a solid sequel to Man Plus, however it definitely lacked the same level of zing as the prior novel. Set 50 years in the future we return to Mars & Roger where something is afoot and the computers seem to be having more "errors" and "bugs" as we saw earlier in Man Plus. Characters seemed a bit flatter, but was still entertaining and enjoyable. Not bad. It's actually a sequel to Man Plus, which is presumably about Roger Torroway, the "first citizen of Mars", 3/4 cyborg and 1/4 human. Mars Plus is more concerned with "the grid", pretty much analogous to the internet but, as usual in older SF, much more controlled than the real internet. There was a lot more sex in it than I expected. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesMan Plus (2)
Fifty years after the colonization of Mars forced its new residents to undergo genetic and cyborg alteration, the Martian computer net, upon which all Martian life depends, develops a dangerous mind of its own. Reprint. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Frederik Pohl & Thomas T. Thomas's Mars Plus
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - Sept 21, 2012
I haven't read the novel that preceded this, Pohl's Man Plus, & that makes me feel slightly uncomfortable since I'm a 'completist' sort at times & prefer reading series in order. Then again, no biggie. This struck me as the most Heinleinian bk I've read by Pohl yet - partially just b/c on p 38 the word "Waldo" is used to mean a "remote manipulator" as it was coined to mean by Heinlein. Of course, this type of perpetuated terminology runs throughout most SF - & I like that.
Having read this back-to-back w/ a Dick novel (In Milton Lumky Territory) I can't honestly say that the writing itself is particularly great: it communicates but it doesn't FLOW in that special pulp way that Dick, Hammett, & Chandler do. Still, it's visionary, probably somewhat scientifically sound, & entertaining. AND it's better than any SF I'm ever likely to write. Then again, I'm not that interested in writing SF - even tho I love reading it. The ending reminds me of the end of Arthur C. Clarke's 2001. Pohl wd've been about 75 when this was published & I can only hope that I'll be this sharp if & when I ever reach that age.
In the long run, I think I'm a sucker for the teat of Mars colonization/exploration stories. It seems w/in the reach of humanity as we-now-know-it & fits right in w/ my enthusiasm for NASA & such-like things. I'm all for the moon landings & wd like to see us go further. Don't think it'll happen in my lifetime but I'm glad I can at least see it as a probable occurrence of the not-too-distant future. & this is probably the best Mars novel I've read yet. It's certainly ONE of the best. Pohl continues to intrigue me. ( )