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As Helen Sutter, her super-sensor expert husband and their friends race to find caches of profitable alien technologies on the mysterious asteroid Ceres, an all-out interplanetary war threatens to break out as more and more enterprising people try to mine the technologies.Tags
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This second in the series keeps up the excellent space opera. A jump of a few years after the end of Boundary sets up a new situation, new challenges, new threats and new characters getting involved. Politics get dirty - though I loved the rowboat bit. And then greed mixes with the politics and gets straight nasty. This book starts (a bit before) the Ceres discovery, and ends with the castaways from the Odin mess vowing to get home (although each book is reasonably complete in itself, I have a hard time remembering after the fact where the seams are). Again, hooked me completely and kept me reading fast; worth reading, and worth rereading. I don't know what the two authors contributed - I find Flint flexible enough that I can't see what show more he wrote. But I'm definitely going to be looking up Spoor, based on these. show less
Stereotypes all the way down.
The EU and Ares are racing to explore the rest of the solar system, in a story that has as many plot holes as a sieve. Still, the action is there and the story moves ahead so it is not all bad.
And all the characters are still photo models of extreme intelligence and physical prowess.
The EU and Ares are racing to explore the rest of the solar system, in a story that has as many plot holes as a sieve. Still, the action is there and the story moves ahead so it is not all bad.
And all the characters are still photo models of extreme intelligence and physical prowess.
Having not read the first book in this series yet I can't comment on the series as a whole or how this book builds upon the previous. There WAS, however, enough explanation of the backstory to allow me to enjoy this book well enough on its own.
Fast-paced with an "action-adventure" feel but with enough of a nod to science to allow me to suspend my disbelief. A few too many "new" technologies for my taste, but that may be in part because some of them were freshly "new" in the first book. By this I mean that sometimes it seemed that the characters would introduce a new capability of their technology just in time to "save the day" ("Hey, Rocky, watch me put a rabbit out of this hat..."")
Certainly readable and I might enjoy it even more when show more I go back and read the first book - I'll let you know. show less
Fast-paced with an "action-adventure" feel but with enough of a nod to science to allow me to suspend my disbelief. A few too many "new" technologies for my taste, but that may be in part because some of them were freshly "new" in the first book. By this I mean that sometimes it seemed that the characters would introduce a new capability of their technology just in time to "save the day" ("Hey, Rocky, watch me put a rabbit out of this hat..."")
Certainly readable and I might enjoy it even more when show more I go back and read the first book - I'll let you know. show less
Again very enjoyable quick read. Half a star less than the first one given the unreasonable actions of the EU faction in this book. Hard to believe that events would ever unfold this way.
I enjoyed the book very much. It is definately written as a hard science fiction book. I am very much looking forward to book #3 which, hopefully, is coming out soon.
A few years after the events of Boundary, the space race is heating up as several more political entities are given engines. Ares Corporation has a money crunch, but finds a new Bemmie base on Ceres. The European Union is feeling shut out and forms a grand plan to steal a march on Ares via industrial espionage. A sociopathic security chief makes the situation worse, as the race for a possible base on one of Saturn's moons turns into a grand chase.
Finished the sci-fi novel, "Threshold" by Eric Flint. It was OK, needed more details of the alien technology and endinng was lame, not what I imagined...in my version they made it to the base on Saturns moon and discoverd an active base and more flyable ships!
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207+ Works 28,953 Members
Eric Flint was born in southern California in 1947. He received a bachelor's degree from UCLA in 1968 and did some work toward a Ph.D. in history, with a specialization in history of southern Africa in the 18th and early 19th centuries, also at UCLA. After leaving the doctoral program over political issues, he supported himself from that time show more until age 50 as a laborer, machinist and labor organizer. In 1993, his short story entitled Entropy and the Strangler won first place in the Winter 1992 Writers of the Future contest. His first novel, Mother of Demons, was published in 1997 and was picked by the Science Fiction Chronicle as a best novel of the year. He became a full-time writer in 1999. He writes science fiction and fantasy works including The Philosophical Strangler and the Belisarius series. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Threshold
- Original title
- Threshold
- Original publication date
- 2010-06
- Dedication
- This book is dedicated to Kathleen.
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- Members
- 176
- Popularity
- 185,394
- Reviews
- 7
- Rating
- (3.65)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 3
- ASINs
- 1




























































