Dome
by Michael Reaves, Steve Perry
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Description
They watched in horror as humanity destroyed itself in a nightmare of biological warfare. Now they are trapped in the Dome - an underwater laboratory off the coast of Hawaii. Scientists. Technicians. Bureaucrats. And the special ones, recipients of an advanced technology - as much machine as human, or more animal than man. They are the citizens of the Dome. Sentenced to the endless night of the ocean floor. Safe from the virus-ravaged surface. They are humanity's last chance.Tags
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Member Reviews
Workers in an undersea mining and research complex watch and react in horror as biological warfare kills everybody living on land.
Dome is an easy and entertaining book to read. It has moments of genuine imagination - the well imagined setting, the tense plot, and the spookily alien artificial intelligences. All are used to good effect to keep the reader engaged.
Other aspects of the book aren't so pleasing. The characterisition is lazy. Their reactions to the crisis are fairly shlocky, right down to the old standby of the power crazy security officer, planning a coup in the middle of disaster, while the ineffective leader crumbled under pressure and wept at his desk. Research was lacking a bit - an attempt to give a character a deeper show more background misfired, as his memories of cheerleaders at soccer games at Toowoomba high school didn't quite ring true (although I guess it's set in the future - maybe high school cheerleading will catch on in Australia?)
Fun, engaging, but ultimately forgettable. show less
Dome is an easy and entertaining book to read. It has moments of genuine imagination - the well imagined setting, the tense plot, and the spookily alien artificial intelligences. All are used to good effect to keep the reader engaged.
Other aspects of the book aren't so pleasing. The characterisition is lazy. Their reactions to the crisis are fairly shlocky, right down to the old standby of the power crazy security officer, planning a coup in the middle of disaster, while the ineffective leader crumbled under pressure and wept at his desk. Research was lacking a bit - an attempt to give a character a deeper show more background misfired, as his memories of cheerleaders at soccer games at Toowoomba high school didn't quite ring true (although I guess it's set in the future - maybe high school cheerleading will catch on in Australia?)
Fun, engaging, but ultimately forgettable. show less
I find it interesting how the theme of going underwater for future survival can create so many diverse story lines & plots. "Dome" and "ARK LIBERTY" are two of my favorites that I reread together every year.
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Dome
- Original publication date
- 1987-02
- People/Characters
- Douglas Copeland; Jonathan Holly Crane; Betsy Emau; Patricia Ishida; Jason Nausori; Richard Ipu Temae
- Important places
- Mea Lana (undersea city); Pacific Ocean
- Epigraph
- Whether it is to flee war, pestilence or hunger, all men eventually return to the sea.
- Toyotomi - Dedication
- For Diane, same winds, two trees;
For Jack Gaughan, worth a billion words;
And for Dr. Pemberton, vindicated! --SCP
For Brynne, once more;
And for the Vendome Street Mafia. --JMR - First words
- "This is Richard Ipu Temae, controlling the deep-frag Malalokai One, detached to observation of volcanic activity on Inouye Guyot; present position, twenty degrees, two minutes north; one hundred and fifty-seven degree... (show all)s, fifty-nine minutes west; holding neutral buoyancy at a depth of twenty-six hundred meters."
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Let's make it happen."
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 134
- Popularity
- 243,121
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.95)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 1
























































