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Ladataan... The Gentle Giants of GanymedeTekijä: James P. Hogan
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Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. My second book by Hogan James Hogan's books are slow moving but interesting. He creates mysteries which slowly unfold for the reader. The characters are realistic but their interaction is often boring. The desire to lean about the true origins of man, the ancient history of the solar system and alien technology keeps you reading. This is the follow up to "Inherit the Stars". Good enough that I will read the third in sequel. Seguito diretto de "lo scheletro impossibile" il romanzo si focalizza sull'apparizione nel sistema solare della nave ganiana sbucata da un lungo viaggio relativistico di oltre 25 milioni di anni (25 anni di tempo soggettivo). Grande emozione e scalpore per il primo incontro con alieni, il romanzo si dipana fra buonismo, "positivismo", curiosità e buone intenzioni, oltrechè sulla lunga serie di teorie e speculazioni scientifiche che caratterizzano questa serie. Molto avvincente, ben scritto, teorie affascinanti (per quanto bizzarre), una bella lettura. Consigliato.
Eine Lektüre, die man verschlingt, und eine Erinnerung daran, daß der Prozeß des Lernens zu den größten Abenteuern des Menschen gehört. Sisältyy tähän:
Fiction.
Science Fiction.
HTML: Long before the world of the Ganymeans blew apart millennia ago, the strange race of giants had already vanished. All that remained of them was a wrecked ship abandoned on a frozen moon of Jupiter. Now Earth's scientists are there, determined to ferret out the secret of the lost race. But when suddenly the Ganymeans return, they bring with them answers that will reveal the secret of our own as well. .Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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It opens in a similar way too: in Inherit… a body is found on the Moon, apparently human but fifty-thousand years old; here, what’s found is a crashed spaceship, preserved in the ice beneath the surface of Jupiter’s largest moon Ganymede—but far older, twenty-five million years old this time. As a scientific team from Earth cut their way in and explore its interior, they find a device which emits pulses of gravity waves and may be some sort of beacon (marker beacon? distress beacon?). Whatever it is, they seem to have unwittingly set it off.
This was published in 1978, around the same time that Ridley Scott’s Alien was being made, and I’ve no idea whether either influenced the other or whether, as ideas sometimes seem to be, the “crashed starship-beacon-aliens” idea was just sort of in the air at the end of the ’70s. Either way (as you can tell from the book’s title) what the humans are confronted with in this case is no nightmare.
As with the first book, this has an old-fashioned feel to it (nothing wrong with that either; all I mean is that it took me back to when I was growing up reading Asimov, say, or Arthur C Clarke); and, again, there’s no action-packed plot, while the ideas the scientists grapple with are both a bit convoluted and scientifically unlikely. But, as with Inherit the Stars, it’s an enjoyable read nonetheless. ( )