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The planet Attica has two continents: Lambda and Delta. The indigenous alien population being restricted to Delta, Earth's colony was planted on Lambda. Before the arrival of the Daedalus, two sailing ships had set out from Lambda to cross the ocean separating the two continents, and neither had returned. Now a third is on its way, and Mariel Valory and Alex Alexander of the Daedalus have hitched a lift, in order that Mariel might use her talent to try to make contact with the aliens. show more Unfortunately, it turns out that contact has already been made, and that the aliens are building an empire with the aid of borrowed Terran technology-an empire that's beginning to crack under its internal strains and eternal challenges. And when Alex and Mariel are marooned by their reluctant hosts, things start to go from very bad too much worse.... Daedalus Mission, Book Five. show lessTags
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The 5th entry in the Daedalus series wanders away from the original mission, from most of the team members, from science fiction, and from any clear point. The one common element with the previous entries is a tendency for the main character to talk for paragraphs and pages. There are several scenes that could have been very dramatic but they were over-talked to death.
Stableford skips the usual landfall and "what kind of situation do we have with this colony" discussion. The book starts on a ocean voyage on a sailing ship from the human colony to another landmass inhabited by furry humanoid felines. (Eventually there's an unconvincing explanation for why this mode of transport rather than simply going by spaceship.) The book sticks show more mostly to an action plot throughout, avoiding the serious derailment of The City of the Sun. But other than a mysterious epidemic, mostly off-stage, there's no SF puzzle solving, and no furthering of the big question about whether colonization is a viable option for Earth. The SF elements are the furry aliens, who act just like us, and a character worrying about what will happen to her somewhat telepathic abilities. Don't hold your breath for much of an answer. At the end, I still had no idea why Stableford wanted to tell this story. show less
Stableford skips the usual landfall and "what kind of situation do we have with this colony" discussion. The book starts on a ocean voyage on a sailing ship from the human colony to another landmass inhabited by furry humanoid felines. (Eventually there's an unconvincing explanation for why this mode of transport rather than simply going by spaceship.) The book sticks show more mostly to an action plot throughout, avoiding the serious derailment of The City of the Sun. But other than a mysterious epidemic, mostly off-stage, there's no SF puzzle solving, and no furthering of the big question about whether colonization is a viable option for Earth. The SF elements are the furry aliens, who act just like us, and a character worrying about what will happen to her somewhat telepathic abilities. Don't hold your breath for much of an answer. At the end, I still had no idea why Stableford wanted to tell this story. show less
The Deadalus continues is mission, this time heading to the world named Attica where a human colony on the Gamma continent is fighting for its survival. As the colony has grown, the imported plants which formed the basis for the sustainability of the colony have suffered and rather than a bounty grown by a few to feed the colony, simple subsistence farming has become the norm. With a trend towards complete self-sufficiency, the colony is on a dangerous path - a path towards fragmentation and ultimately disintegration of the colony. Unless... Unless there is a cause - a grand plan - around which the colony can rally, the colony is doomed. With in mind, our intrepid ecologist, Alex Alexander, sets sail from the Gamma continent to the show more Delta continent - already inhabited by aliens.
And so begins the fifth of the Daedalus Missions... I actually had a bet with a friend of mine that Stableford would pull a play out of his old playbook and use the "unknown third party manipulating the two enemy factions" plotline again. But he didn't. I actually thought this was a superior book to the first of the Daedalus books. There's more action, for one thing. And the plight of the Verheyden family is interesting and its tragic demise rang true. While the final end may have been a little too tidy, it seemed quite plausible and in-character. show less
And so begins the fifth of the Daedalus Missions... I actually had a bet with a friend of mine that Stableford would pull a play out of his old playbook and use the "unknown third party manipulating the two enemy factions" plotline again. But he didn't. I actually thought this was a superior book to the first of the Daedalus books. There's more action, for one thing. And the plight of the Verheyden family is interesting and its tragic demise rang true. While the final end may have been a little too tidy, it seemed quite plausible and in-character. show less
One far flung planet, two continents. On the first: a human colony, finally being visited on a check-up from the UN survey team after well over a hundred years. The other, on the far side of a sea that has yet to be crossed, are the native people of the planet, with their own hopes and dreams that don't necessarily synch with the colonists.Manifest Destiny, socio-religious political manoeuvring and plain old superstition combat the patient, yet persistent Daedalus scientists as they try to set the planet on a more stable course.
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396+ Works 8,032 Members
Author Brian M. Stableford was born in Shipley, Yorkshire, U. K. on July 25, 1948. He received an undergraduate degree in biology from the University of York in 1969 and a Ph.D. in sociology in 1979. Before becoming a full-time writer in 1988, he taught sociology at the University of Reading. He has published over 100 books, including science show more fiction and fantasy works, non-fiction, translations, and learned articles. He has written under the pseudonym of Brian Craig as well as under Brian Stableford and Brian M. Stableford. He has received numerous awards for both fiction and non-fiction including the British Science Fiction Award (1995), the Distinguished Scholarship Award of the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts (1987), the J. Lloyd Eaton Award (1987), the Science Fiction Research Association's (SFRA) Pioneer Award (1996), and the SFRA's Pilgrim Award (1999). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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DAW Book Collectors (322)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Balance of Power
- Original title
- Balance of Power
- Original publication date
- 1979-01
- People/Characters
- Alexis Alexander; Karen Karelia; Nathan Parrick; Peter Rolving; Conrad Silvian; Linda Beck (show all 7); Mariel Valory
- Important places
- Attica (Fictitious Planet); Daedalus (Fictitious spaceship)
- First words
- Night fell swiftly, darkness consuming the sky as the sun's vestigial halo faded in the west.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Find an equilibrium ... and Keep it"
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- Members
- 117
- Popularity
- 276,986
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.47)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 2




























































