![]() Top UnSuggestion for this book: The Devil Wears Prada, by Lauren Weisberger. I would be interested to know if any of the Swedes on my f-list (I know there are at least two of you) has read it, and if you felt Anderson had got it right. At the ending of the book Tau Zero the ending seems odd: Now, I'm not asking whether the big-crunch theory is out of date, whether the universe is slated to eventually collapse, or about the relative (no pun intended) likelyhood of the creation of a spaceship that can travel near the speed of light. So the leading members of the crew are Scandinavian and occasionally mutter in Swedish to each other. It's certainly way better than the Heinlein/Robinson Variable Star, which at one point features a similar situation.Īlthough the crew leave Earth at the very beginning of the book, there too Anderson has designed an interesting background, a post-nuclear war world in which the rest of humanity has agreed to put Sweden in charge (I think he refers also to this setting in There Will Be Time). Although this is billed as one of the hardest of sf books, I suppose because of the importance of the Bussard ramjets to the plot, I found the treatment of the relationships between the crew members very sympathetic and believable, and indeed it's really a story about them than about the technology (which to me moves it off the hard end of the sf spectrum). ![]() 150 : ' a novel by Poul Anderson called Tau Zero that made them ponder the. ![]() The fifty-strong crew of a colonisation starship hit a technical problem - they can't shut the drive off, so the ship will keep accelerating towards lightspeed, where the relativistic factor τ approaches zero (hence the title). particle - beam propulsion in his book Deep Space Probes ( Chichester, U.K. ![]() ![]() com)Īnother of my reading resolutions, one of those sf classics I had never got around to. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |