Lord of Candy reviewed Moving Mars by Greg Bear
Review of 'Moving Mars' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
What a great read. You begin with a story, a psychology, an idiology and think, this book does a good job of understanding the human condition(s). Then the (red) rabbit hole deepens and you are taken into a science of scale that is wonderous and frightening. The results of which create the mess and subsequent liberation of Mars.
I was truly enthralled the whole time. This book in itself could have been broken up into a few volumes and a number of tributaries to let you know more of the people, politic, science, or any such other things but it wasn't. It's not a weakness of the book but just an annotation. What is delivered is broad; like a sinewave deep in some places, shallow in others but understood nearly completely.
It makes me grin in hindsight at the other books to this point. You could read these backwards and …
What a great read. You begin with a story, a psychology, an idiology and think, this book does a good job of understanding the human condition(s). Then the (red) rabbit hole deepens and you are taken into a science of scale that is wonderous and frightening. The results of which create the mess and subsequent liberation of Mars.
I was truly enthralled the whole time. This book in itself could have been broken up into a few volumes and a number of tributaries to let you know more of the people, politic, science, or any such other things but it wasn't. It's not a weakness of the book but just an annotation. What is delivered is broad; like a sinewave deep in some places, shallow in others but understood nearly completely.
It makes me grin in hindsight at the other books to this point. You could read these backwards and be easily as forward. Mars -> Moon -> Earth or Earth -> Moon -> Mars, it really doesn't matter. Funny that way.
Good read all around!