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Heimat Mars. by Greg Bear
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Heimat Mars. (original 1993; edition 1999)

by Greg Bear

Series: Queen Of Angels (3)

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1,883208,872 (3.57)32
Fiction. Science Fiction. Sacrifice, revolution, the promise of freedom. These flood into the life of Casseia Majumdar, daughter of the Binding Multiples. Rebelling against her conservative family, the colonists who occupy Mars, Casseia takes part in the brewing revolution sparked by student protests in the year 2171. Meanwhile, her love life is in a very precarious situation, with her beloved Charles Franklin's seeking to merge his mind with the most advanced artificial mind. MOVING MARS is a science-fiction look at love and war, family and conviction, heart and mind….… (more)
Member:omf
Title:Heimat Mars.
Authors:Greg Bear
Info:Heyne (1999), Paperback
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:sf, mars

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Moving Mars by Greg Bear (1993)

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» See also 32 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
As a huge fan of Greg Bear, I was surprised and dismayed by how much I really did not dig this book. There's no shortage of interesting ideas about Mars and physics and human society in the next couple of centuries, and Bear hangs them on a plot and a character that stand a chance of being involving, but the effect for me nearly all the way through is dry, airless— it's framed as a memoir by someone late in life, but it reads like the kind of memoir that's ghostwritten by someone without much interest in the subject. It's not as if Bear can't write a good female character, or make super-high-tech cultures feel lived-in; he's done both before. And there was a similarly distanced first-person narration that worked much better at shorter length in Bear's related novella Heads (which I loved), where the passivity of the narrator was well suited to what was in effect an "I alone am left to tell thee" horror story. Actually, maybe that's my problem with Moving Mars: there's almost no horror, nor any happier flavor of the sublime. Bear's writing really comes alive to me when he's writing in one way or another about the sublime— inconceivably amazing changes, fates worse than death, personal epiphanies— and it's not just that I like those things in general; I think they bring out his best. But this book seems as if he made an effort to avoid any such thing and to just write about more-or-less-plausible life on Mars and small-scale politics and interesting technology and troubled relationships, until all at once he finally dropped in the Big Crazy Idea (which is derived from the crazy idea in Heads, whose hand-waviness again worked better in a briefer, creepier setting), dropped it in so plot-wrenchingly that it made all those other things the book had been about seem irrelevant, and yet didn't really make the characters face the sublime/horrible qualities of it until near the end. ( )
2 vote elibishop173 | Oct 11, 2021 |
The same Geo-politacal background as the others in the series, but a bit more intense. The first part is a love story--that bored me, but is important for the rest of the story. The heroine goes to Earth and is christened in the crucible of cutthroat-backstabbing politics as she learns that Earth wants the rest of humanity to join it in political unity--or else! Then we learn of the first love's accomplishments in quantum physics and the balance of power changes. And then the action really picks up as the balance of power shifts again. I can forgive Bear's occasional weaknesses on the power of his strengths. It was well worth the read. ( )
  majackson | Aug 30, 2021 |
Loses one star because there's a narrative slowdown in the middle - but right when it picks back up, it's a page-turner. I really appreciate Greg Bear's strong women characters and good dialog, while keeping the SF very thinky. It's a great ride, told in retrospect, and extremely entertaining.

I read it when it first came out in the '90's, and read it again this year, feeling quite validated that I'd hung onto my now-battered copy. Is there anything better than reading a battered old paperback that contains a rip-roaring tale? Why, no. No, there is not. ( )
1 vote terriks | Oct 17, 2020 |
Wonderful account of a woman’s life looking back on the events that led to a cataclysmic conflict between civilization on Twenty-Second Century Mars and mother Earth. Local author Greg Bear does an excellent job of mixing hard SF and sociological SF with a dash of cyber punk all while keeping the female narrator believable and sympathetic. I never knew what was going to happen next (despite the leading title). ( )
  Seafox | Jul 24, 2019 |
Abandoned at 7% into it. Maybe another time, but I lost interest.
  ajlewis2 | Jul 11, 2018 |
Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
Greg Bear goes from strength to strength. This new addition to his distinguished body of work is sure to be considered one of the major SF novels of 1993 and a sure award nominee. The very model of a modern SF novel, it excels in a number of dimensions. ...
... it gives us that without which no Greg Bear novel would be complete, a really Big IDEA. ...
added by RBeffa | editAsimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Moshe Feder
 

» Add other authors (8 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Greg Bearprimary authorall editionscalculated
Barlowe, WayneCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Rodgers, NickCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Russo, CarolCover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The young may not remember Mars of old, under the Yellow sun, its cloud-streaked skies dusted pink, its soil rusty and fine, its inhabitants living in pressurized burrows and venturing up only as a rite of passage or to do maintenance or tend the ropy crops spread like nests of intensely green snakes over the wind-scoured farms.
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Fiction. Science Fiction. Sacrifice, revolution, the promise of freedom. These flood into the life of Casseia Majumdar, daughter of the Binding Multiples. Rebelling against her conservative family, the colonists who occupy Mars, Casseia takes part in the brewing revolution sparked by student protests in the year 2171. Meanwhile, her love life is in a very precarious situation, with her beloved Charles Franklin's seeking to merge his mind with the most advanced artificial mind. MOVING MARS is a science-fiction look at love and war, family and conviction, heart and mind….

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She is the daughter of one of Mars' oldest, most conservative Binding Multiples - the extended family syndicates that colonized the red planet. But Casseia Majumdar has a dream of an independent Mars, born in the student protests of 2171. During those brief days of idealism she forged bonds of friendship and hatred that set the stage of an astonishing revolution on Mars.

Charles Franklin, too, was caught up in those days of passionate youth. Casseia's first love, and a brilliant physicist, he is so dedicated to science that he seeks to link his mind ot the most advanced artificial intelligence in the solar system. It will cost him a lifetime with Casseia Majumdar. It will teach him the secrets of time and space.
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