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Rendezvous with Rama Mass Market Paperback – December 1, 1990
At first, only a few things are known about the celestial object that astronomers dub Rama. It is huge, weighing more than ten trillion tons. And it is hurtling through the solar system at inconceivable speed. Then a space probe confirms the unthinkable: Rama is no natural object. It is, incredible, an interstellar spacecraft. Space explorers and planet-bound scientists alike prepare for mankind's first encounter with alien intelligence. It will kindle their wildest dreams . . . and fan their darkest fears. For no one knows who the Ramans are or why they have come. And now the moment of rendezvous awaits—just behind a Raman airlock door.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSpectra
- Publication dateDecember 1, 1990
- Dimensions4.17 x 0.77 x 6.86 inches
- ISBN-100553287893
- ISBN-13978-0553287899
- Lexile measure990L
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From the Publisher
"Mr. Clarke is splendid...We experience that chilling touch of the alien, the not-quite-knowable, that distinguishes SF at its most technically imaginative." -- The New York Times
From the Inside Flap
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Sooner or later, it was bound to happen. On June 30, 1908, Moscow escaped destruction by three hours and four thousand kilometers--a margin invisibly small by the Stan•dards of the universe. On February 12, 1947, another Russian city had a still narrower escape, when the second great meteorite of the twentieth century detonated less than four hundred kilometers from Vladivostok, with an explosion rivaling that of the newly invented uranium bomb.
In those days there was nothing that men could do to protect themselves against the last random shots in the cosmic bombardment that had once scarred the face of the Moon. The meteorites of 1908 and 1947 had struck uninhabited wilderness; but by the end of the twenty-first century there was no region left on Earth that could be safely used for celestial target practice. The human race had spread from pole to pole. And so, inevitably
At 0946 GMT on the morning of September 11 in the exceptionally beautiful summer of the year 2077, most of the inhabitants of Europe saw a dazzling fireball appear in the eastern sky. Within seconds it was brighter than the Sun, and as it moved across the heavens-at first in utter silence-it left behind it a churning column of dust and smoke.
Somewhere above Austria it began to disintegrate, producing a series of concussions so violent that more than a million people had their hearing permanently damaged. They were the lucky ones.
Moving at fifty kilometers a second, a thousand tons of rock and metal impacted on the plains of northern Italy, destroying in a few flaming moments the labor of centuries. The cities of Padua and Verona were wiped from the face of the Earth; and the last glories of Venice sank forever beneath the sea as the waters of the Adriatic came thundering landward after the hammer blow from space.
Six hundred thousand people died, and the total damage was more than a trillion dollars. But the loss to art, to history, to science-to the whole human race, for the rest of time-was beyond all computation. It was as if a great war had been fought and lost in a single morning; and few could draw much pleasure from the fact that, as the dust of destruction slowly settled, for months the whole world witnessed the most splendid dawns and sunsets since Krakatoa.
After the initial shock, mankind reacted with a determination and a unity that no earlier age could have shown. Such a disaster, it was realized, might not occur again for a thousand years-but it might occur tomorrow. And the next time, the consequences could be even worse.
Very well; there would be no next time.
A hundred years earlier, a much poorer world, with far feebler resources, had squandered its wealth attempting to destroy weapons launched, suicidally, by mankind against itself. The effort had never been successful, but the skills acquired then had not been forgotten. Now they could be used for a far nobler purpose, and on an infinitely vaster stage. No meteorite large enough to cause catastrophe would ever again be allowed to breach the defenses of Earth.
So began Project Spaceguard. Fifty years later-and in a way that none of its designers could ever have anticipated -it justified its existence.
Intruder
By the year 2130, the Mars-based radars were discovering new asteroids at the rate of a dozen a day. The Spaceguard computers automatically calculated their orbits and stored the
information in their own enormous memories, so that every few months any interested
astronomer could have a look at the accumulated statistics. These were now quite impressive.
It had taken more than 120 years to collect the first thousand asteroids, since the discovery of Ceres, largest of these tiny worlds, on the very first day of the nineteenth century. Hundreds had been found and lost and found again; they existed in such swarms that one exasperated astronomer had christened them "vermin of the skies." He would have been appalled to know that Spaceguard was now keeping track of half a million.
Only the five giants-Ceres, Pallas, Juno, Eunomia, and Vesta-were more than two hundred kilometers in diameter; the vast majority were merely oversized boulders that would fit into a small park. Almost all moved in orbits that lay beyond Mars. Only the few that came far enough sunward to be a possible danger to Earth were the concern of Spaceguard. And not one in a thousand of these, during the entire future history of the solar system, would pass within a million kilometers of Earth.
The object first catalogued as 31/439, according to the year and the order of its discovery, was detected while it was still outside the orbit of Jupiter. There was nothing unusual about its location; many asteroids went beyond Saturn before turning once more toward their distant master, the Sun. And Thule II, most far-ranging of all, traveled so close to Uranus that it might
well be a lost moon of that planet.
But a first radar contact at such a distance was unprecedented; clearly, 31/439 must be of
exceptional size. From the strength of the echo, the computers deduced a diameter of at least
forty kilometers. Such a giant had not been discovered for a hundred years. That it had been
overlooked for so long seemed incredible.
Then the orbit was calculated, and the mystery was resolved-to be replaced by a greater one.
31/439 was not traveling on a normal asteroidal path, along an ellipse which it retraced with clockwork precision every few years. It was a lonely wanderer among the stars, making its first and last visit to the solar system-for it was moving so swiftly that the gravitational field of the Sun could never capture it. It would flash inward past the orbits of Jupiter, Mars, Earth, Venus, and Mercury, gaining speed as it did so, until it rounded the Sun and headed out once again into the unknown.
It was at this point that the computers started flashing their "We have something interesting" sign, and, for the first time, 31/439 came to the attention of human beings. There was a brief flurry of excitement at Spaceguard headquarters, and the interstellar vagabond was quickly dignified by a name instead of a mere number. Long ago, the astronomers had exhausted Greek and Roman mythology; now they were working through the Hindu pantheon. And so 31/439 was christened Rama.
For a few days, the news media made a fuss over the visitor, but they were badly handicapped by the sparsity of information. Only two facts were known about Rama: its unusual orbit and its approximate size. Even this last was merely an educated guess, based upon the strength of the radar echo. Through the telescope, Rama still appeared as a faint, fifteenth-magnitude star-much too small to show a visible disc. But as it plunged in toward the heart of the solar system, it would grow brighter and larger month by month; before it vanished forever, the orbiting observatories would be able to gather more precise information about its shape and size. There was plenty of time, and perhaps during the next few years some spaceship on its ordinary business might be routed close enough to get good photographs. An actual rendezvous was most unlikely; the energy cost would be far too great to permit physical contact with an object cutting across the orbits of the planets at more than a hundred thousand kilometers an hour.
So the world soon forgot about Rama. But the astronomers did not. Their excitement grew with the passing months as the new asteroid presented them with more and more puzzles.
First of all, there was the problem of Rama's light curve. It didn't have one.
All known asteroids, without exception, showed a slow variation in their brilliance, waxing and waning in a period of a few hours. It had been recognized for more than two centuries that this was an inevitable result of their spin and their irregular shape. As they toppled end over end along their orbits, the reflecting surfaces they presented to the sun were continually changing, and their brightness varied accordingly.
Rama showed no such changes. Either it was not spinning at all or it was perfectly symmetrical. Both explanations seemed unlikely.
There the matter rested for several months, because none of the big orbiting telescopes could be spared from their regular job of peering into the remote depths of the universe. Space astronomy was an expensive hobby, and time on a large instrument could easily cost a thousand dollars a minute. Dr. William Stenton would never have been able to grab the Farside two-hundred-meter reflector for a full quarter of an hour if a more important program had not been temporarily derailed by the failure of a fifty-cent capacitor. One astronomer's bad luck was his good fortune
Stenton did not know what he had caught until the next day, when he was able to get computer time to process his results. Even when they were finally flashed on his display screen, it took him several minutes to understand what they meant
The sunlight reflected from Rama was not, after all, absolutely constant in its intensity. There was a very small variation-hard to detect, but quite unmistakable, and extremely regular. Like all the other asteroids, Raina was indeed spinning. But whereas the normal "day" for an asteroid was several hours, Rama's was only four minutes.
Stenton did some quick calculations, and found it hard to believe the results. At its equator, this tiny world must be spinning at more than a thousand kilometers an hour. It would be rather unhealthy to attempt a landing anywhere except at the poles, because the centrifugal force at the equator would be powerful enough to flick any loose objects away from it at an acceleration of almost one gravity. ltama was a roiling stone that could never have gathered any cosmic moss. It was surprising that such a body had managed to hold itself together, and had not long ago shattered into a million fragments.
An object forty kilometers across, with a rotation period of only four minutes-where did that fit into the astronomical scheme of things? Dr. Stenton was a somewhat imaginative man, a little too prone to jump to conclusions. He now jumped to one that gave him an uncomfortable few minutes indeed:
The only specimen of the celestial zoo that fitted this description was a collapsed star. Perhaps Rama was a dead sun, a madly spinning sphere of neutronium, every cubic centimeter weighing billions of tons.
At this point, there flashed briefly through Stenton's horrified mind the memory of that timeless classic, H. 0. Wells's "The Star." He had first read it as a small boy, and it had helped to spark his interest in astronomy. Across more than two centuries of time it had lost none of its magic and its tenor. He would never forget the images of hurricanes and' tidal waves, of cities sliding into the sea, as that other visitor from the stars smashed into Jupiter and then fell sunward past the Earth. True, the star that old Wells described was not cold, but incandescent, and wrought much of its destruction by heat. That scarcely mattered; even if Rama was a cold body, reflecting only the light of the Sun, it could kill by gravity as easily as by fire.
Any stellar mass intruding into the solar system would completely distort the orbits of the planets. The Earth had only to move a few million kilometers sunward-.or starward-for the
delicate balance of climate to be destroyed. The antarctic icecap could melt and flood all low-lying land; or the oceans could freeze and the whole world be locked in eternal winter. Just a nudge in either direction would be enough.
Then Stenton relaxed and breathed a sigh of relief. This was all nonsense; he should be ashamed of himself.
Rama could not possibly be made of condensed matter. No star-sized mass could penetrate so deeply into the solar system without producing disturbances that would have betrayed it long ago. The orbits of all the planets would have been affected; that, after all, was how Neptune, Pluto, and Persephone had been discovered. No, it was utterly impossible for an object as massive as a dead sun to sneak up unobserved.
In a way, it was a pity. An encounter with a dark star would have been quite exciting.
While it lasted.
Product details
- Publisher : Spectra
- Publication date : December 1, 1990
- Language : English
- Print length : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0553287893
- ISBN-13 : 978-0553287899
- Item Weight : 4.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.17 x 0.77 x 6.86 inches
- Book 1 of 4 : Rama
- Lexile measure : 990L
- Best Sellers Rank: #348,290 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #56 in Hard Science Fiction (Books)
- #78 in First Contact Science Fiction (Books)
- #806 in Classic Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

SIR ARTHUR C. CLARKE (1917-2008) wrote the novel and co-authored the screenplay for 2001: A Space Odyssey. He has been knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, and he is the only science-fiction writer to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. His fiction and nonfiction have sold more than one hundred million copies in print worldwide.
Photo by en:User:Mamyjomarash (Amy Marash) (en:Image:Clarke sm.jpg) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customers find this science fiction novel engaging with an engrossing plot and heavy scientific content that stirs their imagination. The writing is well-executed, with one customer noting the meticulous detail, and customers describe it as a classic from the preeminent futurist. The book's visual aspects are vivid and realistic, and customers are rapt with wonder throughout the reading experience. While some customers praise the character development and pacing, others find the characters underdeveloped and the pacing slow and uneventful.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a great sci-fi tale with an engaging story and engrossing plot, making it indispensable reading for sci-fi fans.
"Rendezvous with Rama is widely acclaimed as Arthur C. Clarke's best book, and it definitely deserves much of the praise it's gotten...." Read more
"...For a novel with little interpersonal conflict, almost no violence, and only a couple parts that could reasonably described as "action scenes," it..." Read more
"...Much of this one is an adventure story, a throwback for current readers to a time when the wonder of space exploration and first discoveries of..." Read more
"A modern classic sci-fi tale. Arthur C. CLARK relaunched his career with this book, which is finally going to be made into a movie...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, appreciating its heavy focus on science and wonder, with elements of awe in exploration and magnificently awe-inspiring moments.
"...That said, Clarke demonstrates an admirable amount of discipline in not revealing everything about Rama...." Read more
"...It also delves into the conflict between science, politics, and religion, but not in as preachy a manner as some of Clarke's later works did...." Read more
"...Clarke weaves his unknowable cosmic journey with a not-at-all-concealed intelligence and a wry wit that combines into a cohesive package offering..." Read more
"...Clarke is a great science populariser, so the concepts he uses are never hard to grasp, but one must be willing to ponder the subtleties of gravity,..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its perfect manifestation of the author's style and stark simplicity, with one customer highlighting how each word is carefully selected.
"...The setting is simple: A cylindrical vessel, coming from the depth of space is entering the solar system and an expedition party is mounted to make..." Read more
"...Stark simple writing scientific is you will. This makes sense as a sci-fi book. If you like hard sci-fi you'll enjoy this." Read more
"...The story is very well written and well thought out. The premise is plausible, in the future, but not with our current technology...." Read more
"Amazing storytelling. Simple and lean language. One of my top 5 books. All background stories are from earth hence very relatable. I truly loved it...." Read more
Customers find the book highly entertaining, describing it as a fun world-building experience that keeps them rapt with wonder throughout.
"...Rama is excellent at evoking a sense of wonder. Clarke manages to convey the artifact's grandeur and to create a uniquely bizarre alien world...." Read more
"...cosmic journey with a not-at-all-concealed intelligence and a wry wit that combines into a cohesive package offering frequent moments of casual..." Read more
"...I think this book was a great first stop. It was really engaging and exciting at every step of the way...." Read more
"...and Order: good story, linear, no major surprises, unspectacular, satisfying." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's era, describing it as a classic from the preeminent futurist and good old-school science fiction, with several mentioning they loved it years ago.
"...Much of this one is an adventure story, a throwback for current readers to a time when the wonder of space exploration and first discoveries of..." Read more
"...offering frequent moments of casual brilliance that will please readers new and old...." Read more
"I read Clarke as a teenager but missed this one It is very fresh and has a contemporary feel without the anachronisms often present in..." Read more
"...And even though this is 12 years ago written, it was not dated at all...." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual quality of the book, noting its vivid imagery and realistic detail, with one customer mentioning they can easily picture every scene.
"...There is a twist at the end, but it manages to be both subtle and thought-provoking at the same time...." Read more
"It has been years since my last rereading, but it remains a sleek, enjoyable read every time...." Read more
"You know a book is great when it leaves you with unforgettable mental imagery...." Read more
"...Mr. Clarke paints a fantastic world with Rama. It's very vivid and alive. He does very well in transporting you there...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with some praising the fully developed characters and action-driven plot, while others find them underdeveloped.
"...That said, the characters in Rama are surprisingly serviceable, if not great. Commander Norton gets enough backstory to make him relatable...." Read more
"...To be honest, on my reading, those conflicts and personalities are background, I won’t say background “noise” but close to it, buzzing around the..." Read more
"...is, with Isaac Asimov and a couple of others, a fatherly figure for Science Fiction enthusiasts...." Read more
"...There are no villains or monsters to contend with -- there are only the powerful dynamics of physics and the inscrutable ways of alien intelligences..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it well-paced and fast, while others describe it as slow and uneventful.
"...And clocking in at just over two hundred pages, he keeps the pace up, too...." Read more
"...As such, the book may be a bit slow and uneventful for some. Well, maybe not uneventful because a lot is actually happening...." Read more
"...The slow reveals, the awe, and the imagery never disappoint." Read more
"...own, but this is not such a problem for a 240-page book that clips along at a good pace...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2014Rendezvous with Rama is widely acclaimed as Arthur C. Clarke's best book, and it definitely deserves much of the praise it's gotten. That said, the book isn't perfect, particularly when it comes to the characters.
Rendezvous with Rama starts when an large, cylindrical object is detected hurtling towards the sun. The object is named "Rama" after the Hindu god. The United Planets sends the solar survey vessel Endeavour under the command of Commander Bill Norton to investigate. The rest of the book focuses on the crew's exploration of the alien artifact.
Rama is excellent at evoking a sense of wonder. Clarke manages to convey the artifact's grandeur and to create a uniquely bizarre alien world. The structures and other things encountered do not resemble the familiar sci-fi tropes. I especially liked how Clarke takes advantage of Rama's artificial gravity (generated by the object's spin) to present the astronauts with a new challenge. Even more than the alien structures, I'll always remember the description of Commander Norton climbing "down" the ladder towards Rama's "ground."
That said, Clarke demonstrates an admirable amount of discipline in not revealing everything about Rama. Some mysteries remain unanswered, and are thus all the more intriguing. I can only imagine that, when the book was first published in 1973, the effect was even greater and there were fewer books about alien worlds. I haven't read the sequels, but fear they would undermine the majesty of this book.
Clarke has always focused more on alien life and technology than on characters in his stories. That said, the characters in Rama are surprisingly serviceable, if not great. Commander Norton gets enough backstory to make him relatable. Norton's interest in and admiration for James Cook, captain of an earlier Endeavour, gave him some depth. For those who know their history, it also infused the story with some foreshadowing over Norton's fate.
Most of the crew members at least get a few personality quirks that help distinguish them, although few are actually memorable. The lack of characterization generally works - until it doesn't. At a few points, the book places some of these characters in danger and the reader is expected to care, but I found it hard to do so. For example, two-thirds into the book, a character whom we'd never seen before, Jimmy, suddenly appears, and then the next 15% of the book focuses on him and his trials. At the least the character would have benefitted from some sort of introduction.
I've criticized Clarke's problems ending some of his stories in a satisfactory manner, especially his tendency to rely upon incongruous twists or cheats to resolve plot threads (see, for example, my review of Clarke's Childhood's End). Fortunately, Rama avoids this problem. The story ends in a manner that suits the mystery and grandeur of Rama. There is a twist at the end, but it manages to be both subtle and thought-provoking at the same time. I could see how readers demanded a sequel, but the book was designed to - and mostly manages to - stand on its own.
Rendezvous for Rama isn't for anybody. This book is about exploration writ large, about drive to explore rather than the discoveries. If you want a fully realized alien civilization, this isn't the book for you. However, if you want a somewhat realistic account of how man's first contact with alien technology might occur, Rama is still a classic.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2024I first read this novel back in 2007, and having learned that Denis Villeneuve intends to adapt it to film sometime in the near future, decided to give it a second go. Although certain parts of it have dated somewhat (even the best sci-fi tends to date like a fine milk...), I'm happy to say that it's held up fairly well for the most part. For a novel with little interpersonal conflict, almost no violence, and only a couple parts that could reasonably described as "action scenes," it remains a surprisingly compelling story about exploration and discovery. It also delves into the conflict between science, politics, and religion, but not in as preachy a manner as some of Clarke's later works did.
Could Villeneuve adapt "Rama" into a compelling story? Hard to tell. The novel doesn't really offer any solid answers about the origin and purpose of the titular spaceship, and a lot of the "action" revolves around characters walking up and down miles-long ladders and stairs. Clarke's attitude to woman astronauts haven't dated well, but they're such a small part of the story they could be excised without losing anything of importance. I thought "Arrival" (probably the closest analogue to "Rama" of all his movies) was interesting, but I've never been in a hurry to rewatch it. Of course, the movie has been in development hell for so long, we might not find out until 2042!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2024Arthur C. Clarke was a master. I’ve read this one several times now, but probably not for about twenty years. As time goes by, science fiction from the classic era gets filtered over and over until not too many books are still standing. This is definitely one of them, in a small group that maybe also includes Clarke’s Childhood’s End and 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Much of this one is an adventure story, a throwback for current readers to a time when the wonder of space exploration and first discoveries of alien life was all you really needed or looked for.
We passed through, hopefully, an era of high action, high pace where plots hit you with cosmic scale catastrophe and intrigue every chapter. By comparison, Clarke’s plot here rides a fairly even keel.
An object has been detected, passing through our solar system. At first it is thought to be an asteroid or comet, but its orbit and behavior give it away. It’s technological. It’s headed for a high speed pass around the sun, and we’ve detected it early enough to mount an exploratory mission, in this year of 2131 when much of the solar system has been colonized and interplanetary space flight is relatively routine.
Commander Norton, through whose eyes much of the story is seen, commands the Endeavour to a docking with the object, now named Rama. Rama is a large, cylinder-shaped object 50 kilometers long and 20 kilometers wide.
That’s big. Big enough to be a generational ship of some sort, or who knows what, given that we have no idea of its origin or purpose.
The story is the story of Norton’s crew’s mission to explore Rama and determine as much as they, and supporting scientists, can during the time it is safe to fly along with Rama, as it approaches the sun and then either heads back out of the solar system or alters course in some to-be-determined way.
The plot peaks are mostly produced by Rama — its unexpected and enigmatic features and behavior. The plot is also sustained by political and personal conflicts and agendas among the politicians and scientists on Earth and its colonies. To be honest, on my reading, those conflicts and personalities are background, I won’t say background “noise” but close to it, buzzing around the adventures of the Endeavour and its crew.
There’s no superhero stuff, although some heroics certainly, and no monsters, although there is certainly danger as well. To really get into the spirit of the book, you have to let yourself fall into the experience of first contact and the wonder and mystery of a truly alien encounter.
Not to give too much away, but we don’t meet the Ramans themselves. Also in my reading, that’s a strength of the book (as it is in Clarke’s 2001). As readers we are left to imagine the Ramans, with an uncertainty of 100%. That’s the thing about aliens and their artifacts. They are alien.
I can’t let this go without mentioning the parallels between Clarke’s story, written more than fifty years ago, and the real-world passage of ‘Oumuamua through our solar system in 2017. The parallels are eerie, especially if you buy into Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb’s claims that ‘Oumuamua exhibited signs of a technological artifact itself (I don’t).
- Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2025A modern classic sci-fi tale. Arthur C. CLARK relaunched his career with this book, which is finally going to be made into a movie. An asteroid from deep space turns out to be a giant alien artifact. A spaceship is sent to explore it and finds it is not quite dead. A terrific story in the usual CLARK style. The people matter less than the setting.
Top reviews from other countries
- Jorge PReviewed in Canada on March 13, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Clarke's second best.
Bought it for my nephew. I loved this book and I'm sure he will too.
- Armin SalmasiReviewed in Sweden on September 2, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Good read
Good read. Highly recommend
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ErwanReviewed in France on July 17, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Indispensable lecture
Ce livre est pour moi l'un des meilleurs de Arthur C. Clarke.
Il nous raconte la découverte et la visite d'un vaisseau spatial à la dérive dans une ambiance très immersive.
Cette ambiance ainsi que des images fortes sont gravées dans ma mémoire.
J'ai lu ce livre en version originale, et je le recommande à ceux qui découvrent la lecture en anglais: c'est court et d'un niveau très abordable.
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JopskeReviewed in the Netherlands on July 15, 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Originele plot, goed geschreven
Originele plot, goed geschreven. Mooie wendingen en verhaallijn. Aanrader voor Clarke liefhebbers. Helaas, ondanks de pseudo internationale setting, geschreven vanuit de Amerikaanse (militaire) cultuur.
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Lorenzo CangianoReviewed in Italy on December 25, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Un piccolo capolavoro in cui la fantasia dell’autore non tradisce mai logica e leggi fisiche
Ho scoperto questo gioiello da adulto, laureato in ingegneria elettronica, ricercatore e appassionato di esplorazione spaziale. Ho adorato ogni sua pagina. Ogni aspetto, anche il più bizzarro e creativo, è del tutto plausibile dal punto di vista scientifico
Più di tutto ho apprezzato l’originale, ma del tutto verosimile, messaggio sottostante a questa opera di Clarke: altre civiltà intelligenti potrebbero trovarci assai poco interessanti!
***Questa versione in lingua inglese (l’originale) è di facile lettura anche con una competenza linguistica media
I discovered this gem of a novel as an adult, an electrical engineer and scientist with a passion for space exploration. I loved each page within. Every aspect, even the most bizzarre and creative, appears wholly plausible from a scientific point of view
Most of all I enjoyed the original, but entirely credible, idea put forward by Arthur Clarke in this book: other intelligent civilisations might not find us earthlings particulary interesting!