L'Ultimatum

Paperback, 412 pages

Italian language

Published Sept. 1, 1988 by Nord.

ISBN:
978-88-429-1359-7
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(38 reviews)

L'anno è il 1996. Andrew Gordon, consigliere scientifico del Presidente, riceve da una collega una notizia che ha dell'incredibile: Europa, la sesta luna di Giove, è improvvisamente svanita senza lasciare traccia, come se non fosse mai esistita. Poco tempo dopo, Edward Shaw, professore di geologia, s'imbatte in una scoperta straordinaria nella Valle della Morte, un misterioso tumulo di forma conica, alto un centinaio di metri, a prima vista il residuo di un vulcano spento. Tuttavia non è indicato su alcuna mappa, e nessuno l'aveva mai notato prima... Già, perché si rivela subito per ciò che è realmente: un'astronave aliena. E l'avvertimento lanciato dalla creatura che si trova al suo interno è tutt'altro che rassicurante. Ma quando il governo australiano comunica l'improvvisa comparsa di una montagna di granito che sembra anch'essa di natura artificiale, è ormai chiaro che si è in presenza di un'inarrestabile catena di eventi che non hanno spiegazione …

16 editions

Review of 'The Forge of God' on 'Goodreads'

I think this may be the best of my 2019 reads. I found the plot, the characters, the setting/ situation all intriguing. Greg Bear is at his very best in this novel. The story is as well written as "Darwin's Radio"; thematically similar as well. Perhaps one of the most interesting curiosities involves the author's world-view. Suffice it to say he is one gloomy optimist. A truly enjoyable read.

None

This is a book about the end of the world. The cataclysm comes after mysterious artefacts, apparently part of the natural world but not quite good enough fakes to pass muster, appear in parts of Australia, Mongolia and the USA. A dying alien gives a message of impending doom.

The engine of destruction - possibly neutrino/antineutrino bombs at the earth's core - gives the people of Earth time enough to realise that few if any will live to tell the tale; and the novel, whose parts are headed with lines from the Requiem Mass, is the story of some of those who will die, some who will survive (there's a counter-movement, as there is in these things; hardly any authors are rash enough to destroy humanity entirely while breaking up the planet). The death of Earth is mirrored in the slow death of a man stricken with cancer, and much …

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