T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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941.1 | | NEWOA::BAILEY | pink Cadillac/VMS | Thu Jan 03 1991 06:28 | 12 |
| <<< Note 941.0 by AYOV27::RPAGE "It's Green to be mean" >>>
-< Martin Caidin's Prison Ship-mindless sewage >-
> I have had the misfortune to encounter this book and am driven to
> wonder if the author(?) usually writes this sort of dross.
I don't know if its the same "Martin Caidin" but a "Martin Caidin"
wrote the "Six Million Dollar Man" books (among others)
|
941.2 | Yechh | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jan 03 1991 10:09 | 9 |
| If this is the book I remember glancing at in a store, it's pretty raw.
There was a "hard-bitten" scene in a prison, then a line of asterisks
and a note that what followed might be too violent for many readers,
then what I can best describe as "violence-porn", involving the
detailed description of the mutilation of someone's private parts.
De gustibus non disputandem est.
-John Bishop
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941.3 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jan 03 1991 14:21 | 11 |
|
Gee, that's a shame. Caidin wrote at least one decent WWII novel (The
Last Dogfight) and a couple of good nonfiction books (the one I recall
is "Samurai" which was the story of the greatest Japanese figher ace,
Saburo Sakai).
I've tried a couple of his SF attempts (including "Marooned") and was
less than impressed. Thanks for the warning on this one, though!
JP
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941.4 | Another 'nay' vote. | WORDY::HALLOWELL | It's been a slow decade. | Fri Jan 04 1991 08:24 | 16 |
|
Another agreement here. I too read "Prison Ship" some time back and it
was terrible. The premis of the story was great - a ship of escaped
e.t.'s, each from a different planet and with a different story plus
some strange abilities arrives on Earth. Problem is, they link up with
a group of brilliant, charasmatic, tough, honorable human inmates who
they've 'mind-linked' with while traversing this part of the galaxy.
Brilliant, charasmatic, honorable inmates? That's part of the problem
with the book. I can accept almost anything about a being from another
planet, but when human characters are written so unrealistically I
balk. The biggest problem I had with the book was that so many pages
were devoted to telling the history of several characters, only to have
them leave, die, or be a non-factor in the story itself. It was
irritating.
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941.5 | Long long time ago, I can still remember | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Wed Jan 16 1991 16:09 | 7 |
| The only thing I've ever read by Caidin which caught my interest was
"The God Machine". But I was thirteen at the time.
I wonder if it really was a good book?
Max
|
941.6 | | FSDB00::BRANAM | Waiting for Personnel... | Thu Aug 22 1991 16:44 | 5 |
| I remember a looong time ago seeing the movie version of "Marooned", then seeing
it on TV some years later. It is incredibly boring. I also read "Cyborg," on
which the $6M Man was based, back in 8th grade (I thought the TV movie was
great, mechanical legs and eye and all), and found it equally boring. It was
also very long, double shame. I have avoided Caidin's work since then.
|
941.7 | RE 941.6 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Aug 23 1991 10:52 | 6 |
| MAROONED may have seemed boring to you (I found it interesting),
but it gets points in my book for daring to be scientifically realis-
tic in terms of orbital physics, spacecraft designs, etc.
Larry
|
941.8 | | FASDER::ASCOLARO | Tardis Del., When it has to be there Yestdy. | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:22 | 15 |
| Larry,
did you find Marooned scientifically realistic when they were
essentially breathing in vacuum? (as I remember, I last saw this a
number of years ago, sometime after the spacewalk where the crewman
dies, one of the surviving astronauts takes off his helmet and is
'breathing' in the cabin that had not been repreasurrized.)
Was it realistic (I know not scientifically realistic) that the Russian
could match air hoses with the American?
Marooned MAY have had some realism in its orbital mechanics, but it was
far from a realistic film.
Tony
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941.9 | RE 941.8 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Aug 23 1991 12:54 | 6 |
| Okay, it's Clarification Time: No, not every part of MAROONED
was "realistic", but compared to most Hollywood SF science, it was
way ahead of the pack, thus my credit to the film.
Larry
|
941.10 | Give 'em a Break | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG1-2/W10 | Fri Aug 23 1991 19:09 | 9 |
| Hey, I be charitable about blaming the producers of a film of one of
Caidin's novels for techncial inaccuracies. He's not so blameless
himself. In one of his potboilers ("Escape from Earth"?) he has the
passengers of a rocket violently thrown forward when the engines
cut off... (Obviously, even in a vacuum, the cessation of acceleration
results in substantial deceleration).
len.
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941.11 | Before "Hunt for Red October" there was... | BIGUN::HOLLOWAY | Savage Tree Frogs on Speed | Thu Jun 25 1992 02:56 | 10 |
|
He also wrote (many years ago) a novel called "The Aquarius Mission"
which was sort of a cross between the old Irwin Allen T.V. show "Voyage
to the Bottom of the Sea", the movies "The Abyss" and "Leviathan", and
the Frank Herbet novel about the submarine tanker caught in a war in
the Arctic (can't remember the title).
Of the handful of things of his I've read - I'd say this was the best.
David
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941.12 | Under Pressure -- Frank Herbert | MIPSBX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Thu Jun 25 1992 08:20 | 0
|