Voyage to the Red Planet

by Terry Bisson

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The Mars ship Mary Poppins, out of mothballs, takes off on its maiden voyage, for the first on location movie about Mars.

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3 reviews
What struck me when I was reading this near future space adventure is how dated it is. Much has happened since this was originally published in 1991 (not all that long ago), such as further (robotic) exploration of Mars and the collapse of the Soviet Union, both of which never occurred in this story. A couple of the things that did happen in this fictional tale were a rapid decline of the American space program and the privatization of most aspects of government, including NASA and the U.S. Navy. The book does not present a very hopeful future as a result, but it does provide a bit of subtle cultural satire.

It is told from and omniscient point of view with multiple characters, although the central one is Bass, an aging astronaut from show more NASA’s glory days. He is approached by an entertainment conglomerate to help ‘salvage’ a spacecraft built (but never used) by NASA and the Soviets, and to bring a crew of movie stars to Mars to make a movie and, as a result, a lot of money.

The writing is good, the characters are plausible and their individual motivations make sense, but the premise itself, in addition to being dated, just doesn’t. At least not much. I accept the exaggerations about corporate takeovers of government functions for the sake of cultural satire, but how could a huge spaceship be built in orbit without it being common knowledge? Why would it be fully provisioned and then abandoned until it is salvaged by a movie company twenty years later? And sunlight digitized and stored on CDs to provide a power source? Sorry. That’s not ridiculous enough to be funny or realistic enough to be believable.

All in all, this is a fairly enjoyable hard science fiction tale. It has some satire, a bit of humor, decent characters, and a plot that hangs together well. I can recommend it for Science Fiction fans looking for a good, old-fashioned story of near space.
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It's good. A bit dated, although that's understandable (always interesting to read futures written in the past, because they show what people at the time were thinking would happen. In this case, it's corporations buying out the Federal Government). Nothing wrong with it, just a bit on the thin side.
½

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1990
Dedication
For my parents,
Max and Martha,
who taught us kids to fly
First words
As huge as it was lonely, it looked like a great folded umbrella, with three cylinders as long as football fields clustered alongside the forward end of a mile-long plastic beam; not yet darkened with the dust that slowly dar... (show all)kens the universe, it gleamed in the light of the snowcapped planet below.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3552 .I7736 .V69Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-

Statistics

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170
Popularity
192,046
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.43)
Languages
English, French, German, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
1