From: Damien Broderick (d.broderick@english.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Thu Oct 28 1999 - 06:40:55 MDT
Here's something of interest to the sf readers & utopians & microtubules here:
White Mars
Brian Aldiss, Roger Penrose
£16.99
Hardcover - 256 pages (25 November, 1999)
Little, Brown & Company; ISBN: 0316852430
Amazon.co.uk
White Mars is, as its title implies, Brian Aldiss's considered reply to the
novels--Red Mars, Green Mars and Blue Mars--in which Kim Stanley Robinson
portrayed the terraforming of our neighbour planet and the creation of a
utopian society there. Aldiss disapproves of the whole idea of meddling with
another world in the first place, and also, more genially, of the melodrama
surrounding the creation of Robinson's utopia. Where Robinson's Martians get
their chance after near-genocidal warfare on Mars, and environmental
disaster on Earth, Aldiss's get theirs as the result of a corruption and
scandal-fuelled recession in which supplies for the Martian colony are a
victim of cuts. This is, unusually for the shrewd and sometimes cynical
Aldiss, a novel with a hero--Tom Jeffreys, the Thomas Jefferson of this
Martian revolution:
"His manner was less severe than well controlled. He showed great
determination for the cause in which he believed, yet softened it with
humour, which sprang from an innate modesty. He was not above self-mockery.
In his speech he adopted the manner of a plain man, yet what he said was
often unexpected."
This is a very English, and a very urbane book, in which there is an awful
lot of talk--about utopia, about consciousness, about sub-atomic particles;
Aldiss collaborated on parts of the book with mathematician and physicist
Roger Penrose--this is a wise book and also a knowledgeable one. --Roz
Kaveney
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