T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
528.1 | | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Thu Sep 24 1987 14:54 | 5 |
| Yes, 2001 and 2010 are a good example of sequels not matching up
to the originals. I thought 2010 was much better. (Certainly as
far as the movies went. The novels were closer together in quality.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
528.2 | Yes to RWR II | FORTY2::MCCARTNEY | | Thu Sep 24 1987 15:52 | 8 |
| Ugh, I don't think I could disagree more (.1). I have been a great
fan of Arthur C. Clarke for some time but I was greatlt disappointed
with both the book and film. Both were respectable works of science
fiction but not a patch on the original 2001 (which was fantastic).
However, that dosn't mean to say that I don't want to see a
sequel to RWR. RWR was, I think Clarke at his very best. Even a
poor sequel has got to be good.
|
528.3 | More on the RAMA and ODYSSEY sequels | DICKNS::KLAES | Angels in the Architecture. | Sat Sep 26 1987 20:07 | 47 |
| Path: muscat!decwrl!decvax!ucbvax!sdcsvax!ames!oliveb!sun!plaid!chuq
From: chuq%[email protected] (Chuq Von Rospach)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-lovers
Subject: Re: Clarke signs $4m book deal
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 26 Sep 87 16:07:20 GMT
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Reply-To: [email protected] (Chuq Von Rospach)
Organization: Fictional Reality, uLtd
Lines: 17
>> The main book of the contract is Rendevous with Rama II, which was sold to
> ...
>> how they are going to resolve the cliffhanger ending of the first book.
>
> Cliffhanger? In RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA?
Oh, let me clarify. Cliffhanger was PUBLISHERS WEEKLY's word, not
mine. I believe that what they mean by this is they have absolutely
no idea of what they are going to do other than write a sequel. The
ending *does* leave things wide open, but at the same time it really
does not give any decent hook to start from, either. We all know a
second of those things is going to show up, but then what? [Perhaps
we will find out what happened to the inhabitants of RAMA, and/or
maybe the ones in this next starship/space city will be encountered
personally. - LK]
>ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT and the hostess mentioned that Clarke was
>writing two more sequels to "2001", "2060", and something else which
>I do not remember.
2061: ODYSSEY III is due out from Del Rey in hardcover in January,
1988. I believe the final book in the series is dated 20001 (any bets
on ODYSSEY IV?), and is probably going to come out between a year and
two after that, also in hardcover. For paperback folks, Del Rey
normally schedules paperback editions between 10 and 14 months after
hardcover depending on sales.
These are being written under a separate contract. Rights for
2061 were sold to Judy-Lynn Del Rey before her death for $1.00US
(Clarke's normal advance with the late editor), and 2061 is dedicated
in her memory.
chuq
Chuq Von Rospach [email protected] Delphi: CHUQ
|
528.4 | Clarke won't write until he has the facts | DICKNS::KLAES | Angels in the Architecture. | Mon Sep 28 1987 11:43 | 22 |
| Path: muscat!decwrl!decvax!mcnc!rutgers!mit-eddie!tyg
From: [email protected] (Tom Galloway)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-lovers
Subject: Re: Clarke signs $4m book deal
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 27 Sep 87 20:49:04 GMT
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected] (Tom Galloway)
Organization: MIT, EE/CS Computer Facilities, Cambridge, MA
Lines: 8
While the next book in the ODYSSEY series is supposed to titled
20001 (and in fact was supposed to have been the 3rd in the series),
Clarke is on record as saying he won't write it until the GALILEO
probe has reached Jupiter. Therefore, I doubt it'll be out within the
next few years, and the way NASA is going, possibly not until 2001.
[GALILEO is currently scheduled to reach Jupiter by 1995. I wonder
what ever happened to the KEPLER Jovian moon landers Clarke mentions
in 2010? :^) - LK]
tyg
|
528.5 | Movie? | TUNER::FLIS | | Tue Sep 29 1987 15:38 | 11 |
| I had heard, *several* years ago, that PBS was planning on doing
a made for TV movie of RWR. Then that it was going to be a motion
picture, then, nothing.
Was any of this *real*? RWR is a great read, just from the
plausibility point of view, as well as suspensfull and very well
written. With today's special effects, it would make an awesome
film!
jim
|
528.6 | Blueprints? | TUNER::FLIS | | Tue Sep 29 1987 15:39 | 7 |
| A second question. I was told, once upon a time, that Bantam had
published a book with artist sketches, blueprints and painting of
the interior of Rama and other items from the book.
Any truth to this, and where could I get a copy?
jim
|
528.7 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Chaise pomme | Wed Sep 30 1987 04:25 | 12 |
| re:.5
PBS had plans about 10 years ago to film a number of sf novels.
The only one that actually got made was LeGuin's THE LATHE OF
HEAVEN.
re:.6
No. No such blueprints/whatever exist, at least none were offered
commercially.
--- jerry
|
528.8 | | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Wed Sep 30 1987 10:19 | 2 |
| Anyone have a copy of LATHE to borrow?
|
528.9 | Does one follow the other? | DICKNS::KLAES | Angels in the Architecture. | Wed Sep 30 1987 17:35 | 37 |
| Path: muscat!decwrl!sun!pitstop!sundc!seismo!uunet!mnetor!utzoo!sq!msb
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-lovers
Subject: Re: Clarke signs $4m book deal
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 29 Sep 87 01:02:51 GMT
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected] (Mark Brader)
Organization: SoftQuad Inc., Toronto
Lines: 22
Checksum: 19998
[Spoiler of RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA, as if it wasn't spoiled already]
Chuq Von Rospach ([email protected]) writes:
> > > The main book of the contract is RENDEVOUS WITH RAMA II, ...
> > > ... cliffhanger ending of the first book.
> Oh, let me clarify. Cliffhanger was PUBLISHERS WEEKLY['s] word, not mine.
> ... We all know a second of those things is going to show up, but then what?
Anthropocentrism alert! Anthropocentrism alert!
We all know that there are two more of those things *out there*,
but what makes it likely that they would be anywhere near us? They
should have been launched to three *different* destinations. The
first one had no interest in us, so why should we expect the others to
come this way?
Unless, of course, they felt the project was so important that
they did it by nines, launching three on each path...
Mark Brader, SoftQuad Inc., Toronto, utzoo!sq!msb, [email protected]
"The recent explosion of tourism has ruined the
planet Arrakis for me forever." -- Spider Robinson
|
528.10 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Miracle and Magic! | Thu Oct 01 1987 05:43 | 5 |
| re:.8
That depends on where you're located and if you have a Betamax.
--- jerry
|
528.11 | Going on #3 | HYDRA::JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Thu Dec 24 1987 09:58 | 6 |
| re .9
I havn't read RWR in a while, but I seem to remember that in the
beginning of the story the Earth is hit by something BIG. I had
assumed at the time that it was RAMA #1. So the next one is #3!
To coin a phrase, 'have I erred' ?
|
528.12 | | DICKNS::KLAES | All the galaxy's a stage... | Thu Dec 24 1987 10:31 | 8 |
| No, Earth was struck by a large asteroid in the Twenty-First
Century, which wiped out a good deal of the Mediterranean. After
that incident, an asteroid watch program was initiated, in order
to keep such a disaster from occuring again. It was this intense
watch which led to the discovery of RAMA.
Larry
|
528.13 | Belated Reply Triggered by Duplicate Note Elsewhere | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 19 1988 16:16 | 9 |
| re .6, .7 - While no blueprints were published, there was a set
of illustrations published in a hardbound volume called "Classics
of Science Fiction" or something like that. It included illustrations
of Niven's Ringworld, Aldiss's Hothouse (The Long Afternoon of Earth?),
and a few others. I can get more complete information if anyone
cares.
len.
|
528.14 | RWR-2 with Gentry Lee, and there will be a third | MTWAIN::KLAES | Saturn by 1970 | Thu Oct 27 1988 15:16 | 41 |
| Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-lovers
Path: decwrl!ucbvax!agate!eos!ames!ncar!tank!uxc!uxc.cso.uiuc.edu!
Subject: Re: Clarke info
Posted: 25 Oct 88 22:04:00 GMT
Organization:
Nf-ID: #R:uxa.cso.uiuc.edu:118600006:uxe.cso.uiuc.edu:53400007:000:1639
Nf-From: uxe.cso.uiuc.edu!ahiggins Oct 25 17:04:00 1988
From [email protected] (Lloyd Haskins):
> Since he seems to have succumbed to sequel-mania with 2001, any rumors
> or talk about his doing something with his earlier works, such as _The_City_
Clarke is just finishing RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA II, with is
co-authored with Gentry Lee (one time head of NASA's Galileo Project
and producer of Carl Sagan's COSMOS). They have also agreed to write
a third book in the series (remember,"The Ramans do everthing in threes").
The latest issue of LOCUS contained a letter from Clarke in which
he says he is working on a television show based on "The Fall of Moondust".
> Also, before I go and spend money on them, what are the Venus Prime books?
> At first glance it seems that they're works commissioned by him from other
> authors (???). Any common story line?
The books are novelizations of some of Clarke's short stories.
The two avaible now have been authored by Paul Preuss, and according
to LOCUS, he has agreed to write four more books in the series. The
Venus Prime series shares a common story line, along with characters
and settings.
Andrew J. Higgins | Illini Space Development Society
404 1/2 E. White St apt 3 | a chapter of the National Space Society
Champaign IL 61820 | at the University of Illinois
phone: (217) 359-0056 | P.O. Box 2255 Station A
e-mail: [email protected] | Champaign IL 61820
"Someone once defined a crank as an enthusiast without a sense of humor, and
I have always believed that nothing is so important that you cannot make
fun of it." - Arthur C. Clarke
|
528.15 | Earth hit big | POLAR::LACAILLE | Ignorance-curable,Stupidity-forever | Tue Dec 20 1988 13:31 | 4 |
|
Earth was hit by something big in Nivens(?) Lucifers_Hammer.
Charlie
|
528.16 | _Footfall_ ditto | BMT::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Tue Dec 20 1988 14:33 | 1 |
|
|
528.17 | 1 for 2 | OASS::MDILLSON | I was better, but I got over it. | Wed Dec 21 1988 09:21 | 2 |
| In Niven/Pournelle's _Footfall_ there was only the threat of being
hit with an asteroid. In _Lucifer's Hammer_, booooom!
|
528.18 | | MORGAN::SCOLARO | A keyboard, how quaint | Wed Dec 21 1988 10:15 | 10 |
| Re:< Note 528.17 by OASS::MDILLSON "I was better, but I got over it." >
> In Niven/Pournelle's _Footfall_ there was only the threat of being
> hit with an asteroid. In _Lucifer's Hammer_, booooom!
Sorry, I distinctly remember that the snouts dropped an asteroid in the
Indian Ocean. There was some description by the congressman about the
wave travelling over the sub-continent.
Tony
|
528.19 | "We can throw rocks, Man." | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | frittered away by details | Thu Dec 22 1988 15:05 | 7 |
| re . last few
In 'Lucifer's Hammer' Earth was devastated by a comet. In
'Footfall' the snouts 'lowered the foot', ie. dropped a
small asteroid on Earth. The idea was used earlier by Heinlein
in 'The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress'.
|
528.20 | "Our Footprint is on the prey's seabed." | DOOBER::MESSENGER | Dreamer Fithp | Wed Dec 28 1988 11:53 | 17 |
| Re: .-1
> In 'Lucifer's Hammer' Earth was devastated by a comet. In
> 'Footfall' the snouts 'lowered the foot', ie. dropped a
> small asteroid on Earth. The idea was used earlier by Heinlein
> in 'The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress'.
Heinlein didn't know what a cometary impact would do do the global
climate (Mike dropped a _lot_ of rocks, but there was no talk of comet
weather).
Niven and Pournelle did. Therefore, so did the Traveler Fithp. The
Foot was designed to make the humans give up. But they didn't
understand humans...
- HBM
|
528.21 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | frittered away by details | Wed Jan 04 1989 15:11 | 1 |
| I stand corrected. But you gotta wonder what all those rocks did.
|
528.22 | | BMT::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Tue Jan 17 1989 14:29 | 8 |
| > I stand corrected. But you gotta wonder what all those rocks did.
Flattened NORAD headquarters at Cheyenne Mountain among other things.
It's interesting that the folks in _Footfall_ saw the mountain as
a safe refuge (especially with "Robert Anson" in the group).
-dave
|
528.23 | | SKITZD::MESSENGER | Dreamer Fithp | Wed Jan 18 1989 18:57 | 14 |
| Re: .-1
> Flattened NORAD headquarters at Cheyenne Mountain among other things.
> It's interesting that the folks in _Footfall_ saw the mountain as
> a safe refuge (especially with "Robert Anson" in the group).
Umm... dropping the Foot on the Hole probably would have been a
bad idea -- the Traveler Fithp intended to *live* on Winterhome.
Ruining the North American grainbelt would *not* have been in their
plans.
There's a big difference between a Dinosaur-killing asteroid and
a 50-ton grain barge.
- HBM
|
528.24 | GARDENS OF RAMA due early next year | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Wed Sep 06 1989 17:18 | 3 |
| The sequel to RWR 2 is due out in January or February of 1990,
according to sources on SF-LOVERS.
|
528.25 | | JAKES::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Nov 13 1989 21:45 | 3 |
| I heard the book is already out.
Eugene
|
528.26 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Secretary of the Stratosphere | Tue Nov 14 1989 00:33 | 7 |
| re:.25
It is out. I saw it last week. It's co-authored with Gentry Lee.
However, what Larry was talking about is the sequel to it (i.e.
RWR *3*).
--- jerry
|
528.27 | RAMA 4! | TUNER::FLIS | stopit!stopit!stopit!stopit! | Tue Nov 14 1989 12:29 | 13 |
| RE: .24
In addition to GARDENS OF RAMA, yet another rama book is due out
before the end of 1990. I beleive the working title is: THE ANSWER
RAMA II is turning out to be a fairly good read, though there is
more time spent on character definition than on Rama. Not bad,
but the opposite of RWR.
I'm about half way through. Will post my views when complete.
jim
|
528.28 | RAMA REVEILED | TUNER::FLIS | stopit!stopit!stopit!stopit! | Wed Nov 15 1989 12:29 | 19 |
| Correction to .24
The title of the 4th RAMA book is RAMA REVEILED, due out before
the end of 1991.
MILD SPOILER
One thing that I happen to like about this book is that they are
going into the second RAMA ship under the assumption, untill proven
otherwise, that this ship is identical to the first RAMA. Each
time even the slightest things is different or new it is recorded
and commented on. As a result, this book *easily* follows the original
to the T.
more later,
jim
|
528.29 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Feb 12 1990 21:26 | 112 |
| Just finished reading Rama II. The following is a somewhat lengthy
review with possible spoilers:
A Review of Rama II
By Eugene Z. Xia
If Rendezvous with Rama (Rama I) has succeeded as a
story of an alien spaceship that dazzles our minds and of
an alien race that shows utter disinterest at the presence
of humanity, then Rama II is a story of homocentricity both
in substance and in the style the story is told. In the
process, Rama II destroys the wonderful personified imagery
Rama I created--that of a heroic figure that holds the
universe and even Gods in utter contempt as it dives directly
into the sun, and treats it as a mere fuel dump. The feeling
of awe and wonder that generated by that passage in Rama I
can only be matched by the image of Siegfried as he enters the
Rhine accompanied by Wagner's majestic music. In this respect
Rama II is a total disaster.
Rama II becomes a stage upon which a human drama unfolds.
Clarke ends his Rama I with a brilliant stroke, but it is
clearly not intended as a hint for a sequel because the story
has depicted all that it can about the the alien race and
successfully expressed the philosophical view of the story.
Any further revelation of detail and purpose of the alien
spaceship will de-mystify the advanced alien race and destroy the
wondrous and almost religious visions the reader has accumulated
through out the book. Mystery and wonder often go hand in hand.
In short, the main character, that of the alien spaceship,
has already exhausted its potential in Rama I.
This presents a fundamental obstacle to Clarke and Lee
in producing a sequel to Rama I. They must choose between
creating a set of new characters and tell a completely
different story with the second Raman spaceship receding
into the background or fundamentally change the second
Raman ship's characteristics. In the end, they did both.
If Rama I is set in the year 2130, then the human society of
Rama II is but a thinly disguised version of that of the
present world. It is rather ironic to find that while people
in Rama I are comfortable with polygamy but Wakefield of Rama
II becomes violent when he discovers his wife's infidelity.
This reversal to the present world is in a sense unavoidable
if Clarke and Lee want to emphasize more on the human characters
because while it is relatively easy to create a detailed
character of a technological marvel such as that of the Raman
ship, it is very difficult if not impossible to create,
completely out of imagination, live human characters that we
can identify with. Hence, the reference to our present world
is crucial.
If it has destroyed the image of wonder of Rama I, then
Rama II has also risen from the ashes of Rama I with an
interesting human story, but the reincarnated phoenix is,
in my opinion, not up to the original one. The self-confidence
of Rama I that is so elegantly portrayed by its altogether
ignoring the human presence is substituted with vulnerability
and benign intent of Rama II which itself needs saving by
humans. When Rama I heads toward the sun, it laughs at the
human attempt of arming and disarming the bombs with contempt.
But in Rama II, the bombs raises serious concern, and it is
the human who holds the ultimate destiny of Rama II.
Unlike Rama I which is a complete story with a simple genre,
Rama II is made almost artificially complex with many loosen
ends untied so the authors can continue with Rama III. It has
also left enough clues to the reader to construct some coherent
guesses as to what the story is about and how it will end in Rama
III or possibly in Rama IV. With all the religious overtone,
Rama II is obviously a Noal's ark coming to Mercury to make
contact with human and to pick up some specimens. After
discovering that humans no longer live on Mercury, it turns
around and heads for earth. In order to make this premise work,
the original genre for Rama I must be changed from that of an
intrepid interstellar traveler who has no interest in humanity
or the solar system to a space probe like that of Voyger II
that collects and relays its information to Rama II. The
avians and octospiders on board Rama II are obviously intended
to be sentient by Clarke and Lee, but they cannot possibly be
the races that build Rama II. Hence, the most logical explanation
is that they are somehow picked up by the Ramans from other star
systems. But why are there three lairs in New York, and only
three with the third lair built for humans? But how come there
are exactly three species (including humans) the same number
with which Ramans are so famous for? Well, my explanation is
that Rama created three species a long time ago.... Now if
Rama I is a probe, Rama II is a Noal's ark, it doesn't take a
genius to figure out what Rama III's purpose is....
It is not very comforting to learn that there are only three
human-beings worthy of ... salvation? Of course, these are all
speculations of Clarke and Lee's intent and somehow I cannot
believe Clarke would want to end the story with the destruction
of earth (not that he hadn't done it before in Childhood's End).
|
528.30 | Bring Back the Real Clarke | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Feb 13 1990 17:14 | 20 |
| I finished Rama II a few months ago and was utterly disappointed.
It struck me mostly as a place holder, an excuse for writing another
book. It felt more like Lee than Clark, and I thought most of the
extended diversions into the personalities of the players was a
weakness rather than a strength; unlike Cherryh's or LeGuin's
characters, these were not people I could get involved with. With the
exception of the "general with a conscience", they mostly bored me, and
I really wasn't interested in their pasts. I don't agree that RWR
exhausted the potential for awe and thus Rama II *had* to rely on its
characters to sustain it. Were that to be the case, it failed miserably.
There was, and remains, enormous unexploited potential in Rama as a world.
Nor do I buy the notion of Rama II as Noah's ark, there's just no basis
for that conclusion. Where's the threat of extinction? And what
justification for it?
Sorry, this was just a crummy book.
len.
|
528.31 | yuck yuck | ZPOV01::HWCHOY | FE110000 | Mon Jul 02 1990 14:02 | 7 |
| .30
I utterly agree with your point of view. I am also badly disappointed
with the other coop book by Clarke and Lee ("Cradle"). Well, back to
the Asimovs and Nivens.
hw :-(
|
528.32 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Sun May 05 1991 17:06 | 5 |
| Anyone heard anything about Rama III? Despite the disappointment of
Rama II, I am waiting for the third one. Just to rap up the thing and
see if my predictions in .29 are right. :-)
Eugene
|
528.33 | The news from Internet ... | OZROCK::HUNT | Peter Hunt, T&N Engineering. | Tue May 28 1991 01:20 | 16 |
|
If it's not out in the US now, it will be within the next few months.
In US paperback publications of Rama II, they have excepts from "The
Gardens of Rama" or some such, so it can't be far away ...
I actually quite liked Rama II. The style was pretty different
to RWR, and a lot of the action could have occurred ANYWHERE
( most of the interactions between characters had nothing to
do with Rama, per se ), but I thought the characterisation
was heaps better in this book than in the first.
As a book, I thought it was great. As a sequel to RwR, I thought
it was fair.
Peter.
|
528.34 | September | KRISIS::reeves | Jon Reeves, ULTRIX compiler group | Tue May 28 1991 13:03 | 3 |
| The Garden of Rama, by Arthur C Clarke with Gentry Lee, expected in the
US in September from Bantam in hardcover. No UK information given.
(From March '91 Locus)
|
528.35 | | OREO::WITHERS | Bob Withers | Wed May 29 1991 02:32 | 13 |
| re: 528.33 Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama II 33 of 34
OZROCK::HUNT "Peter Hunt, T&N Engineering."
> If it's not out in the US now, it will be within the next few months.
> In US paperback publications of Rama II, they have excepts from "The
> Gardens of Rama" or some such, so it can't be far away ...
My copy of RAMA II has an excerpt from "The Fountains of Paradise" at the end
of it. I bought mine abou christmas at Walden Books. Publication info leads]
me to believe that this is the 10th printing of the first paperback edition(US)/.
What edition were you reading?
BobW
|
528.36 | Not my copy ... | OZROCK::HUNT | Peter Hunt, T&N Engineering. | Fri May 31 1991 08:43 | 8 |
|
> What edition were you reading?
Unfortunately, it's not my edition; I heard about the extract second-hand.
(So I guess I can't swear it exists, but the person involved claims to
have the copy with the extract).
Peter.
|
528.37 | it's in there? | MAZE::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Sun Jun 09 1991 12:29 | 15 |
| re: where's the extract?
>My copy of RAMA II has an excerpt from "The Fountains of Paradise" at the
>end of it. I bought mine abou christmas at Walden Books. Publication
>info leads me to believe that this is the 10th printing of the first
>paperback edition(US). What edition were you reading?
Look again. I believe I have the same one you have. It has six extracts,
the *first* being from "The Fountains of Paradise", the second from "The
City and the Stars", the third from "Imperial Earth", the fourth from "The
Deep Range", the fifth from "Garden of Rama", and the last from "The Ghost
from the Grand Banks" (claimed availability November, 1990; but I haven't
seen it). ISBN 0-553-28658-7.
Ray
|
528.38 | | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Sun Jun 09 1991 22:55 | 8 |
| > and the last from "The Ghost
>from the Grand Banks" (claimed availability November, 1990; but I haven't
>seen it).
I think I saw it in hardback in some bookstore.
--Simon
|
528.39 | Most confusing, Captain | COOKIE::WITHERS | Bob Withers | Wed Jun 12 1991 00:06 | 5 |
| >Look again. I believe I have the same one you have. It has six extracts,
Looks like you're right. Thanks!
>Ray
BobW
|
528.40 | The Garden of Rama | BASEX::GEOFFREY | Melenkurion Abatha ! | Tue Aug 13 1991 14:59 | 14 |
|
Moderator please feel free to move this reply to its own topic if
you feel that would be more appropriate.
I was browsing through the new books in print the other day and
came across a sequel to Rama II. The title is The Garden of Rama. It
starts off with 3 astronauts still on the ship from Rama II headed out
of the solar system. I paid $18.95 for the hardcover. I was very
surprised to come across this book at the bookstore before seeing
something in this conference. I am just a little ways into the book
but it is good so far.
Jim
|
528.41 | Rama's don't only do things in 3's | BASEX::GEOFFREY | Melenkurion Abatha ! | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:23 | 8 |
|
Well I have finished the Garden of Rama and one thing for sure
I've got to believe there will be another book. GoR was very good
and I would put it on the BUY list. I hesitate to put too much of a
description of the plot because I don't want to give anything away. One
hint though is that Earth's role is by no means finished. I think I
like this one better than the first 2 however this one would not be as
good without the support from Rama I or Rama II.
|
528.42 | Tune In Next Week for the Next Exciting Adventure... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG1-2/W10 | Fri Aug 23 1991 19:03 | 9 |
| I read Gardens of Rama during a roundtrip to Houston a few days ago.
Definitely a cliffhanger ending. IMHO it was better than Rama II but
not as good as RwR; while it had much of the "SF as background" feel of
Rama II, there was less of the "inside the heads" of the characters
and more genuine Clarke "sense of wonder" technology extrapolation,
though not as much as RwR. Are my predispositions showing?
len.
|
528.43 | Disappointed! | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri Nov 01 1991 15:50 | 7 |
| Most unsatisfactory. I found myself reading the back flyleaf looking for even
a partial resolution of any one of the plot lines. Arthur has forgotten, in
his sequel-mania that this is a novel and not a serial episode and, as such
needs to stand on its own, if only a little. Hell, I've read chapters with
better closure than this supposed novel!
-dave
|
528.44 | | ECADSR::BIRO | | Tue Dec 10 1991 16:13 | 15 |
| I agree it was not a great book. I found the plot very
transparent and lacking in curiosity and in the adventure that
I would assume one would have. The plot dealt more with
the political and social issues of today rather then exploring
the the possibilities of the GOR. Maybe I am showing bias,
but what would you think of a 'Ring World' novel that missed the
adventure and curiosity of exploring the new world.
I would wait for the paperback edition, unless the next
sequel hits the books store first. Then you will have to
make up your mind as then ending of GOR is simular to the
ending of the 'Perils of Pauline'.
john
|
528.45 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 20 1992 14:21 | 12 |
| As we all know, RWR III was written by Clarke and Lee -- but it seemed that
Clark wrote the first half and Lee wrote the second. I liked the first half,
but the second was tedious and boring (except the part just before the end --
Clarke must have been called in for a few hours...), but I kept trudging through
it hoping that it'd get better, only to come upon an ending that defined the
lowest point in the 2nd half.
Unfortunately, I've had the same feeling toward RWR II and III as I had toward
"Lost in Space" as a kid -- I'd think it was terrible, but I might as well find
out what's going to happen next...
Roak
|
528.46 | Days of Our Rama... | COMET::BUCHANAN | | Sun Feb 07 1993 13:04 | 13 |
| I vote the colonies' name be changed to Peyton Place. Between the
silly soapiness and the sillier preachiness (if I want a sermon on aids
reseach funding, I'll write one myself), I had to check the cover to
see if this book was science fiction. With the exception of a brief
side trip to the other habitat that Clarke seems to have written, the
entire rest of the book is a waste of trees. After being preached at
about the environment, endangered species, aids, and war as a political
tool of the establishment, I wanted the Ramans to Vacc the place. Even
the sermens weren't anything more than the fashionable, politically
correct, stuff you hear on any talk-show! Where's the sense of wonder?
Where's the granduer of RWR? WHERE THE HELL IS CLARKE?!?
Pardon me while I go chew nails and spit bullets...
|
528.47 | Frustation on large scale | FRSMIC::BALZER | Christian Balzer DTN:785-1029 | Mon Feb 08 1993 07:27 | 19 |
|
I read GoR during an emotional low and I never thought that I could get
so depressed from a work of Clarke. While the preaching got on my nerves,
the overall constant failures (or was that "human nature"?) of every homo
"sapiens" in this book were a slap in my face. It's not that I wanted a
pathetic happy ending (although I could have used one back then), but
mishap after mishap while ignorance and the "bad boys" prevailed isn't my
cup of tea and doesn't look like Clarke.
I also hoped for a Raman intervention, had it been pulling the plug of the
human habitat or something less drastic.
But the end of this book has been the most frustating thing in a long time.
It makes you want to buy the next one in an attempt to find out that a
(happier) ending is possible. But to wade through another ordeal like GoR
might be too much...
Skol,
<CB>
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528.48 | RAMA Revealed | BASEX::GEOFFREY | Blueberries are our friends | Tue Mar 01 1994 09:16 | 9 |
|
The 4th book in this series is now available in hardcover.
According to the dust jacket it looks like this will be the last one.
The title is :
Rama Revealed
Jim
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528.49 | Working On It | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Tue Mar 01 1994 11:32 | 7 |
|
I picked up a copy late last week, but since it's been almost three
years since I read The Garden of Rama, I went back to reread that one
first. Stay tuned...
len.
|
528.50 | Rama Revealed | DPDMAI::MILLERR | Lost my TARDIS, now I'm stuck here! | Tue Mar 01 1994 13:52 | 6 |
| I'm on page 425 of 466. I think this one is MUCH better than the
previous one. I'm not to the bit where all the questions are answered
yet, but it looks like it'll all be tied up soon. I'll be glad to find
out who the Ramans are.
- Russ
|
528.51 | Rama Revealed | DPDMAI::MILLERR | Lost my TARDIS, now I'm stuck here! | Wed Mar 02 1994 11:57 | 14 |
|
Well, just finished it last night.
Is it an end to this series of books - Yes. It's possible more can be
written though, it wasn't completely closed out.
Was I satisified with the answers - No. It's like reading a mystery
novel that's 2000 pages long, and then not agreeing with whodunit.
The answer is too BIG (you'll have to read it to see what I mean).
Good stuff in the middle though. I think the story ELEMENTS are strong
here, but not the ultimate plot. Worth reading for the former.
- Russ
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528.52 | Not Satisfied | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Fri Mar 04 1994 11:23 | 8 |
|
Yeah, I agree, I'm within ten pages of the end and I'm getting bored.
I was very disappointed by the revelation (as it were). It's just too
glib, and it impressed me as relevant to all that everyone's been
through in only the most tenuous of ways.
len.
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528.53 | most of book:OK ...ending:cop out | TPS::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler * TAY1-2/H9 * 227-4472 | Thu Mar 31 1994 16:11 | 9 |
| I finished it last night. OVerall I'd rate it as much better than
book #2 in the series, maybe equal to book #3, and not as good as
the 1st book in the series. I too was "let down" by the ending- it
seems like a "cop-out" for an explanation of it all!
Jim
P.s. some elements of this "saga" are such that I'd like to see a
movie made about it . . . not an easy task though!
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528.54 | | CSOA1::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Sun Apr 24 1994 09:51 | 5 |
| Just finished RR; disappointed with the 'revelation' (too glib and
off-the-cuff, not enough depth) and too many loose ends (What was the
point of introducing "Maria"?). Obviously they plan to do another book.
Dave
|