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Carey Rockwell

Author of Stand By for Mars!

20 Works 799 Members 17 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Carey Rockwell

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Common Knowledge

Other names
Rockwell, Carey
Gender
male
Short biography
The name Carey Rockwell was a pseudonym used by Grosset & Dunlap. It is unknown who wrote the books, or even if there was only one writer.

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Discussions

Possible Heinlein juvenile in Name that Book (November 2018)

Reviews

17 reviews
The dynamics of the team are surprisingly complex, with Roger Manning's pride and scorn proving very difficult for Tom and Astro to deal with.

The book is unusual for a 1952 space drama. Tom, Astro and Roger are put together as a team of three cadets. Typically there would be an enemy outside of the team. Instead, the main mystery and challenge in this book is Roger Manning himself. Tom and Astro struggle to integrate him into their team, struggling to overcome his disinterest and sometimes show more actively uncooperative behaviour. The team in other words strives mostly against itself. It takes almost the entire narrative arc of the book before we get the reveal of why Roger is driven to behave in this way. Ultimately the team triumphs by working together to overcome the challenge of an almost impossible journey, by joining together to strive against nature itself.

The book is also unusual in the Dr. Joan Dale has a role of authority and scientific expertise. Although she shows up rarely, she's clearly in charge of the classification tests, a leading scientist, and a friend and equal of Commander Strong.

"Joan Dale held the distinction of being the first woman ever admitted into the Solar Guard ... Her experiments in atomic fissionables was the subject of a recent scientific symposium held on Mars. Over fifty of the leading scientists of the Solar Alliance had gathered to study her latest theory on hyperdrive, and had unanimously declared her ideas valid. She had been offered the chair as Master of Physics at the [Space] Academy..." (Chapter 3, pp. 30-31)

The series could have gone in an interesting direction building on these characters and ideas, but it dropped all of the complexity and nuance in the next book.
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½
My dad gave me his old copy of this book when I was about eight. I lost track of it over the years, and bought a replacement copy just a couple of years ago. Story was about as good as I remembered it - that is, very good - but I hadn't remembered what a jerk Roger Manning was; wonder if that was consistent through the whole series? I'll definitely be picking up other books in the series if I happen across them.
"Carey Rockwell" is a pseudonym for the unknown authors of the Tom Corbett, Space Cadet books.

It seems quite likely to me that the author of this second book in the series is different than the author of the first. The first has an unusual psychological complexity for its era and genre.

This second book is instead quite clumsily written, with cardboard stereotype characters. The puzzling and complex team dynamic in the first book is lost.
Ah early 1950s vintage science fiction where adding space to a word made it futuristic, like spacemen, spacecadets and spaceburgers.

It's quite a fun even if a touch corny read, we meet Tom Corbett who has signed up for spacecadet training. We meet his unit who don't quite gel together and through adversity become a cohesive unit, when facing said adversity some hidden truths about one of the unit members are revealed and naturally once they become a cohesive unit they're able to overcome show more said adversity.

Might even read the other Tom Corbett spacecadet books now, this was really quite good.
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½

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Associated Authors

Willy Ley Technical Advisor, Technical adviser, Technical Editor, Contributor
Louis S. Glanzman Illustrator
Olav Vedeld Translator

Statistics

Works
20
Members
799
Popularity
#31,914
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
17
ISBNs
144
Favorited
2

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