2061: Odisea tres

, #3

No cover

Arthur C. Clarke: 2061: Odisea tres (Español language)

Español language

Published Dec. 31, 1986

3 stars (27 reviews)

2061: Odisea tres es una novela de ciencia ficción del escritor británico Arthur C. Clarke, publicada en 1987. Es el tercer libro de la serie Odisea Espacial de Clarke. Vuelve a uno de los personajes principales de las novelas anteriores, Heywood Floyd, y sus aventuras desde el regreso en 2061 del cometa Halley a la luna Europa de Júpiter. Clarke originalmente tenía la intención de escribir el tercer libro después de que la misión Galileo de la NASA llegara a Júpiter y arrojara sus hallazgos a fines de la década de 1980. Inicialmente se había programado el lanzamiento de la sonda en 1984, pero se retrasó, primero hasta 1985 y luego hasta 1986. Se retrasó aún más a raíz del desastre del transbordador espacial Challenger. Decidiendo no esperar, Clarke se inspiró para su secuela en el regreso del cometa Halley. Galileo fue finalmente lanzado por el transbordador espacial Atlantis en …

5 editions

reviewed 2061: Odisea tres by Arthur C. Clarke (Odisea espacial, #3)

No aguanta la comparación

2 stars

Content warning Toda la parte de Sudáfrica ha envejecido rematadamente mal, igual que la "importancia política de los diamantes" madre mia que pifia de trama

Ok

3 stars

I wasn’t expecting much from this, having been badly burned by reading one of the other “great ideas” authors in the form of Isaac Asimov (he may have had some great ideas, but his writing is third-rate and his characters are poorly drawn…) So I was pleasantly surprised by how easy Clarke is to read (as long as you can get over the inbuilt sexism and colonialism, and the curious devotion to Great Men of Science and Business). But not much happened, really. Short version: there is other life in the solar system, and the Monoliths are full of woo. Most of the book seemed to be setting up for a climax that never really arrived. Probably of interest to Odyssey completists, but there are better books out there.

Ok

3 stars

I wasn’t expecting much from this, having been badly burned by reading one of the other “great ideas” authors in the form of Isaac Asimov (he may have had some great ideas, but his writing is third-rate and his characters are poorly drawn…) So I was pleasantly surprised by how easy Clarke is to read (as long as you can get over the inbuilt sexism and colonialism, and the curious devotion to Great Men of Science and Business). But not much happened, really. Short version: there is other life in the solar system, and the Monoliths are full of woo. Most of the book seemed to be setting up for a climax that never really arrived. Probably of interest to Odyssey completists, but there are better books out there.

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