Marsbound
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Young Carmen Dula and her family are embarking on the adventure of a lifetime-they're going to Mars. But Carmen's rebellious streak leads her to venture out into the bleak Mars landscape alone, where she is saved by an angel. An angel with too many arms and legs, a head that looks like a potato gone bad-and a message for the humans on Mars: We were here first...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
As the Phoenix spacecraft begins examining Mars for conditions favorable to life, two renowned science fiction authors create very different stories of Martian cultures.MarsboundJoe Haldeman. Ace, (304p) Hugo and Nebula winner Haldeman infuses this yarn with his teen narrator's intelligent curiosity. Carmen Dula, part of the first human colony on Mars, looks like a typical young adult heroine: distanced from her parents, irritated by her bratty younger sibling and beset by tyrannical colony administrator Dargo Solingen. Then she accidentally discovers real Martians living in an underground city and has to convince Solingen that her story is true. When the Martians reveal a terrible threat to life on Earth, it's up to Carmen and her friends to save the day. Recalling Robert A. Heinlein's Red Planet and Podkayne of Mars, Haldeman updates the Martian setting while keeping faith in his characters' ability to respond to unexpected challenges.
Customer Reviews
Good first book in what should have been a two book series.
I just wanted to write this as a counter to Gig 'Em's review which stated not to read the rest of the series. While I agree that the book can stand on its own very well and is a good story, I feel that Starbound adds a lot of further information to clarify and extend and show growth in the characters from this book. Now I completely agree that Earthbound is not a suggested read. So, I would recommend Starbound as a worthy sequel, but consider it the end of the series.
Good book, but don't read the rest of the series.
This book stands pretty well on its own, and on its own it's fairly interesting. That said, it's part of a three-book series, and I would discourage reading the next two books if you want to hang on to a nice memory of the first one.