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Loading... Venusby Ben Bova
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is a fun tale involving some old side-characters stemming from the Dan Randolph books, now given more prominent roles, and some completely new characters, such as the protagonist Van Humphries. In this story, Alex Humphries, first-born and heir of industrial space tycoon, Martin Humphries, died on a mission to Venus two years ago. Martin Humphries offers a ten-billion dollar reward to any space-faring crew that can recover Alex’s body. Alex’s brother and strained son of Martin, Van Humphries, sets out to collect on the reward, designing a ship meant for Venusian landing and recruiting a crew. His mission of recovery, however, is thwarted when his ship runs into an unexpected problem and Van is at the mercy of one of his competitors for rescue, Lars Fuchs. Together, they’ll have to survive the Venusian elements and make some startling discoveries. Bova, Ben. Venus. Tor, 2000. Grand Tour 18. In Venus, Ben Bova brings back the Humphries family from the earlier books in his grand tour series. Lunar industrial magnate Martin Humphries offers a big prize to anyone who can retrieve the remains of his oldest son Alex who died in the first manned expedition to Venus. Lars Fuchs, an old business rival of Humphries, and Van Humphries, Alex’s younger brother, race each other into the atmosphere of Venus in balloon landers. Bova’s Venus is not the fanciful tropical jungle planet imagined by earlier writers like Robert Heinlein. It is the Venus described by millennial science—a planet with a carbon dioxide atmosphere laced with sulfuric acid and surface temperatures over 700 F. If there is life on Venus, you won’t want to meet it. This is one of the better novels in the series. 4 stars. Thin plot, poor character development, fast read. There is also a trace of sexism and racism. Despite all these faults it is a pace pace story which I read in just a few hours. THis is the first Ben Bova book that I have read and it may be the last. I should add it was good escape from the other books that I am currently reading. 18 books in and [b:Venus|768918|Venus (The Grand Tour, #18)|Ben Bova|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1316129566l/768918._SY75_.jpg|1922277] is the only body this side of [b:Saturn|64703|Saturn (The Grand Tour, #13)|Ben Bova|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1316130751l/64703._SY75_.jpg|2566821] that the Grand Tour hasn't explored, so it seems a perfectly fitting place to end (I'll get back to that). There's something of a continuation of the The Asteroid Wars, with Martin Humphries and his sons as the focus of the books. One (Alex, All that actually makes Venus somewhat interesting and unique among the Grand Tour novels. It's not really one of the corporate war books, such as the early Moonbase books or the Asteroid Wars, but it's also not a purely scientific exploration of Venus--although there's plenty of that. It's really more an an adventure novel with a sci-fi setting and backing in the hellscape that is Venus. That actually makes it a surprisingly solid book. I'm glad that Martin Humphries wasn't in more of the book--I really can't stand him and I'm glad his plotline didn't really go much of anywhere in the foreground after the Asteroid Wars--and Van's whining feels real enough, even if he's rather whiny for an adventure protagonist. We get a good chunk more Lars Fuchs, who has fallen far--albeit for a good reason. Always good to see. One thing that's always a star in Bova's books is the idea of finding life absolutely everywhere. He's fond of implying that whereever there's water, there will be life... And now even that doesn't seem to be a limiting factor. The life on Venus is pretty crazy, both in the clouds and on the surface and I wish we had a bit more time to explore that. But so it goes. Overall, one of the better books of the Grand Tour. Which works out, since I think that I'm done with the Grand Tour for now. The remaining books leave the solar system and get even further away from the near future hard sci-fi of the rest of the Grand Tour. There were hints that we are not alone, particularly in [b:The Aftermath|768917|The Aftermath (The Grand Tour, #12; The Asteroid Wars, #4)|Ben Bova|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1442426245l/768917._SY75_.jpg|754977] and to some extent the [b:Mars|267282|Mars (The Grand Tour, #4)|Ben Bova|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1173282407l/267282._SY75_.jpg|1932635] trilogy, but nothing quite so blatent. Not something I'm looking for just yet. Perhaps one day. Six months and 18 books later, I think it's time to listen to something else. no reviews | add a review
The surface of Venus is the most hellish place in the solar system, its ground hot enough to melt aluminum, its air pressure high enough to crush spacecraft landers like tin cans, its atmosphere a choking mix of poisonous gases. This is where the frail young Van Humphries must go-or die trying. Years before, Van's older brother perished in the first attempt to land a man on Venus. Van's father has always hated him for being the one to survive. Now, his father is offering a ten-billion-dollar prize to the first person who lands on Venus and returns his oldest son's remains. To everyone's surprise, Van takes up the offer. But what Van Humphries will find on Venus will change everything-our understanding of Venus, of global warming on Earth, and his knowledge of who he is. 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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The adventure was certainly dramatic. The tech acceptable. The science interesting, and, I assume, as accurate as reasonable to what was known at the time. The What If barely adequate. And so, I'm not particularly glad I read it, except to say now I've read a Bova and now I know I won't need to again. ( )