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Sequel to: Dragon's egg. Friendly aliens on the planet Dragon's Egg must somehow survive and rebuild after a starquake destroys almost everything. Humans orbiting above the surface must decide whether to stay and help or return to Earth.Tags
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This sequel to [b:Dragon's Egg|263466|Dragon's Egg|Robert L. Forward|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1403166825s/263466.jpg|2530528] picks up right after the first... which is already rather extraordinary for regular time-constraint purposes.
Just imagine first-contact with little super-dense and fast-living aliens living on a neutron star passing through our Solar System. Now imagine how fast they live: one-million times faster than we do. Civilizations rise and fall in a single day. Technological breakthroughs, cultural revolutions, vast discoveries, and vaster falls can happen in the space of moments.
This happened in the first book. A week for us saw the Chela try to interpret the super slow movements of gods in the sky, go through show more revolutions, scientific breakthroughs, and finally society capable of waiting for whole generations to speak a few words to us. :)
Add to that some pretty awesome science on both sides done realistic enough to surprise the crap out of me, end the book on a really high note of a new alien civilization having taken all our combined knowledge to take it further than we ever dreamed... and then give us book two. :)
This is where we begin... and within a day, the massively amazing technologically broken-through society, even now fulfilling a dream of time-travel... falls.
Easy come? Easy go. The fall and the redemption of both their species and the fate of our astronauts. So fun. :)
My only complaint? The Chela may look weird and have VERY strange biology, but psychologically they're pretty much exactly like us.
Fortunately, the science and the ideas more than make up for this slight flaw. :) show less
Just imagine first-contact with little super-dense and fast-living aliens living on a neutron star passing through our Solar System. Now imagine how fast they live: one-million times faster than we do. Civilizations rise and fall in a single day. Technological breakthroughs, cultural revolutions, vast discoveries, and vaster falls can happen in the space of moments.
This happened in the first book. A week for us saw the Chela try to interpret the super slow movements of gods in the sky, go through show more revolutions, scientific breakthroughs, and finally society capable of waiting for whole generations to speak a few words to us. :)
Add to that some pretty awesome science on both sides done realistic enough to surprise the crap out of me, end the book on a really high note of a new alien civilization having taken all our combined knowledge to take it further than we ever dreamed... and then give us book two. :)
This is where we begin... and within a day, the massively amazing technologically broken-through society, even now fulfilling a dream of time-travel... falls.
Easy come? Easy go. The fall and the redemption of both their species and the fate of our astronauts. So fun. :)
My only complaint? The Chela may look weird and have VERY strange biology, but psychologically they're pretty much exactly like us.
Fortunately, the science and the ideas more than make up for this slight flaw. :) show less
The stars of this novel are certainly the cheela, the aliens who live on the surface of a neutron star. Bob Forward's writing was improving greatly at this time, but it still has infelicities. But the ideas - and the aliens - make up for it.
You can read Dragon's Egg without reading this but you cannot really read this without having read Egg. The story continues on without a break. In the 5 years between the publication dates Forward has learnt a thing or too about the storyteller's art. I think he's also been reading Frank Herbert and some very alien things happen to the cheela. It's quietly written and is left to your imagination to see what it would be like to be reborn over and over again. Yes, a thoroughly enjoyable novel.
The sequel to the very excellent Dragon's Egg, this book covers the continued interaction between the humans and the super cute Cheela. Unfortunately for the Cheela they suffer a major natural disaster which destroys society. I love an author who is willing to kill of characters when it progresses the story, and there is lots of that happening in this book. Really enjoyable.
http://www.stillhq.com/book/Robert_L_Forward/Starquake.html
http://www.stillhq.com/book/Robert_L_Forward/Starquake.html
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Common Knowledge
- Original title
- Starquake
- Original publication date
- 1985-10
- Blurbers
- Niven, Larry; Pournelle, Jerry
- Original language*
- English
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
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- Rating
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