The Clockwork Rocket
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
In Yalda's universe, light has no universal speed and its creation generates energy. On Yalda's world, plants make food by emitting their own light into the dark night sky. As a child, Yalda witnesses one of a series of strange meteors, the Hurtlers, that are entering the planetary system at an immense, unprecedented speed. It becomes apparent that her world is in imminent danger — and the task of dealing with the Hurtlers will require knowledge and technology far beyond anything her civilization has yet achieved! Only one solution seems tenable: if a spacecraft can be sent on a journey at sufficiently high speed, its trip will last many generations for those on board, but it will return after just a few years have passed at home. The travelers will have a chance to discover the science their planet urgently needs, and bring it back in time to avert disaster.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Scientific treatise (with charts and diagrams) melds with character study and social commentary in Hugo-winner Egan's stand-alone steampunk SF novel. On a faraway world with technology and culture roughly analogous to those of our Victorian era, the female polymorph Yalda studies the properties of light and discovers a celestial object that seems certain to strike her planet. A society that harshly subjugates women (easy when childbirth inevitably kills the mother) works against her as she tries to build and launch a rocket that will take her people to safety. Difficult, dense scientific conjecturing makes this a nearly impenetrable read for those lacking physics degrees or superior spatial thinking, but the societal analogy, totally alien culture, and intriguing characters are potent reasons to power through.
Customer Reviews
Excellent
The first in the series is extremely good. As a physicist, I appreciate the effort to create a science from scratch, and then set a world and story within it. I yelled at the book a few times when I first started because the physical world made no sense. Then, I got of my high horse and just enjoyed.
I can see how those without any science background could get confused or bored. I enjoyed the heck out of this.
Egan at his best
Unique original story steeped in science and mathematics. Reminiscent of the classic Dragon's Egg (By Robert Forward). First of a trilogy; the remaining novels seem a bit slower. This could be due to reading them over a few years.