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7 Reviews
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Eccentric POV,
By JFBeilman "Bibliophile" (Wichita, KS United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
I enjoyed both this novel and the previous, "Desolation Road." The two major reasons are the eccentric characters and the exotic setting of a far-future terraformed Mars.
The first reason for my enjoyment of this (so far) two book series, is the the strange and unusual characters. Most, if not all, of the characters has some eccentric trait that makes them outside the norm. Such traits include supernatural or magical talants, unusual outlooks, being part of a strange and exotic sub-culture, and most extreme of all, undergoing an actual physical transformation from human to inhuman. I especially liked the two main protagonists, one from each book, who turn out to be more unusual than it first appears. In each novel, the supposedly human protagonist goes in search of an powerful alien entity that went missing, only to find out that they were really, literally, searching for their own true selves! The second reason I like "Desolation Road" and "Ares Express," is the exotic far-future setting of a terraformed Mars. The various locations are depicted in wonderful and mystical detail. There is a great variety of settings including an underground city of Belledonna, the diamond-domed Grand Valley, the lush Forest of Chrys, along with the titled settings of Desolation Road and Ares Express. Because of these, and other reasons, I really hope the auther writes a third book in this weird and wonderfully exotic world.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Spectacular Ride,
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
Ares Express is the story of Sweetness Octave Glorious Honey-Bun Asiim Engineer 12th, daughter to an engineer in a caste-system society which lives on the massive fusion-powered steam locomotives of Mars. She loves the locomotives and longs to be her trains's next Engineer, but while women drive trains in other places, other societies, they don't in hers; instead, her family arranges for her a marriage to a galley-supervisor on another train. She runs away instead, and soon lands herself in the position of being the only person on in the world who can save reality as she knows it.
The world McDonald creates is a breathtaking riot of people and cultures, technology and magic, dire threats and unlikely salvation, where the impossible is perfectly normal and the dramas of home and family and dreams and duty intertwine harmoniously with those of a threatened apocalypse. The characters, too, are a wonder---unlikely and fantastic to us, but fitting seamlessly into this technological fantasy-realm: Uncle Neon, the man who was struck by lightning on the tracks and whose consciousness now resides in a signal beacon; Grandmother Taal, who can work miracles with magic, but only on brown things; Little Pretty One, the ghost of Sweetness Octave's dead twin sister who is . . . rather more than that; Devastation Harx, who seeks to destroy all mechanical entities on the planet and above it from a human-powered flying cathedral, and Sweetness Octave herself, who intended to save herself from a destiny someone else would force upon her, and ends up tasked with doing the same for her entire planet. Reading this book is a delightful experience---an epic heroic fantasy story, a journey through a fascinating world, and, like a frantic high-speed flight on a runaway nuclear locomotive, a truly spectacular ride.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wild and strange scifi yarn!,
By
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
If I could sum up this novel with one single word, it would have to be "weird." In a good sort of way, mind you, but weird nonetheless. Big, ambitious, and multilayered the way all Ian McDonald books are, Ares Express also possesses a healthy dose of fun, wit, and absurdity which make this work quite different from what McDonald has accustomed us to in recent years. If Jack Vance, Terry Pratchett, and Hal Duncan had ever teamed up to write a book, they would have come up with something akin to Ares Express.
Hence, those readers who found novels such as River of Gods and Brasyl a bit too cerebral may enjoy Ares Express on a very different level. Just buckle up and get ready for quite a ride! Things don't always make sense, and at times one wonders what the heck is going on and where McDonald is going with this story, but stick with it to the end. Ares Express is a satisfying and rewarding read. Here's the blurb: A Mars of the imagination, like no other, in a colorful, witty SF novel, taking place in the kaleidoscopic future of Ian McDonald's Desolation Road, Ares Express is set on a terraformed Mars where fusion-powered locomotives run along the network of rails that is the planet's circulatory system and artificial intelligences reconfigure reality billions of times each second. One young woman, Sweetness Octave Glorious-Honeybun Asiim 12th, becomes the person upon whom the future--or futures--of Mars depends. Big, picaresque, funny; taking the Mars of Ray Bradbury and the more recent, terraformed Marses of authors such as Kim Stanley Robinson and Greg Bear, Ares Express is a wild and woolly magic-realist SF novel, featuring lots of bizarre philosophies, strange, mind-stretching ideas, and trains as big as city blocks. As far as the worldbuilding goes, since the book is set in the future of McDonald's Desolation Road, I was afraid that not having read that novel would mean that I might miss nuances and certain plot points. Yet Ares Express takes place sor far in the future that you can read and enjoy it without having read Desolation Road. As is always his wont, Ian McDonald's narrative makes the setting come alive. This is a semi-terraformed Mars whose imagery is nothing short of arresting. Although Ares Express is doubtless Sweetness Octave's book, it's the supporting cast which gives the novel its depth and flavor. Grandmother Taal, Devastation Harx, the United Artists, and many more characters add more layers and help make this an unforgettable tale. The pace is uneven throughout, and trying to make sense of what exactly is happening can be mind-boggling at times. There are POV shifts from one paragraph to another in certain portions of the novel, which takes some getting used to. But once you grow comfortable with the fact that McDonald is willingly pushing this story all over the place, everything settles down and it gets easier. Though Ares Express possesses some of the qualities which made books like River of Gods, Brasyl, Cyberabad Days, and The Dervish House such fantastic reads, this book is a world away from the others. Wild, strange, picaresque, and funny, Ares Express will surprise you on several levels.
4.0 out of 5 stars
superb Martian thriller,
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
On Mars, Sweetness Octave Glorious Honey-Bun Asiim Engineer 12th dreams of replacing her father as the Engineer of the Catherine of Tharsis train. However, she also knows of the gender ban as females are prohibited from driving trains. Now eight Martian years old, her family arranges her marriage to a Stuard clan, who drive a different train.
Headstrong, Sweetness rejects wedding the Stuard lad. Knowing her options is saying I do or running away, Sweetness flees her train home accompanied by Serpio Waymender of a lower caste clan as they only are a trackbuilding group. Her clan is disgraced and she is subject to execution for humiliating them amidst the train driving families. The runaways cross the desert seeking Devastation Harx, the leader of a mail-order religious clan living on an airship; the sect apparently has the sprit of Sweetness' dead twin sister "captured". However, her late sibling "Little Pretty One" is nothing like she expected and Sweetness learns the meaning of betrayal as Harx has plans for the twin to gain control over the angels who control the Martian climate. At the same her Grandmother Taal searches for her Sweetness. The sequel to Desolation Road is a superb Martian thriller that reads more like a fantasy than a science fiction. The courageous obstinate heroine is terrific as she holds the fascinating but convoluted story line together while making a journey through all types of alternate Martian landscapes. Fans will relish Ares Express although keep the plausibility meter in the drawer as at times the plot goes over the top of Olympus Mons. Harriet Klausner
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another home run,
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
Quite as much fun to read as Desolation Road. Not loaded with typos.
A total blast from beginning to end. Very, very enjoyable to read. So, if this was originally published 13 years after DR, and another 9 years have now gone by, is another sequel due soon?
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
No Way to Run a Railroad,
By fredtownward "The Analytical Mind; Have Brain... (Mocksville, North Carolina, United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE)
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
It has been 22 years since author Ian McDonald last visited the universe of terraformed Mars, Indian-based culture, and gargantuan fusion-powered steam locomotives he created in Desolation Road so you'd expect change, and there IS change, some for the better and some for the worse.
One change for the better IMHO is the focus on a single main character, a single heroine: Sweetness Octave Glorious Honey-Bun Asiim Engineer 12th, would-be successor engineer (despite being a girl) and harborer of the not-so-imaginary ghost of her deceased Siamese twin, rather than the too many characters and only distantly associated stories of the episodic first novel. In fact I think the book would have been better if Mr. McDonald had kept a tighter focus on the struggle between Sweetness and Devastation Hark, leader of a false religion and megalomaniac, rather than returning largely to picaresque episodes in chapters 15 through 27. Not that many of these aren't memorable: Cyrene Caius Ankhatiel Ree, gambling for years of one's life with Sweetness' formidable grandmother, Taal Chordant Joy-Of-May Asiim Engineer; the United Artists, Comedy Terrorists, taking down a dangerous demagogue; Dr. Alimantando, founder and savior of Desolation Road, giving a very important Martian history lecture to Sweetness (and by extension readers); Sanyap Bedassie, Cloud Cineaste and prisoner of the dream-deprived citizens of Solid Gone. The trouble is that as a result, the main story is largely on hold for a quarter of the book. Another issue as other reviewers have pointed out, is the cheating on the plausibility rules of science fiction. Basically there are four ways to cheat on this: Time Travel, Alternate Dimensions, Altered Perceptions of Reality Due to Insanity, Substance Abuse, or Religious Fervor, and finally, Hey, We're in a Story, and ANYTHING Can Happen in a Story! I think it says something that Mr. McDonald makes use of all four cheats in this novel. Of these only the first three can be defended even pseudoscientifically, so guess which one Mr. McDonald uses the most? I can put up with these sorts of winks and nods from an author if they're done humorously enough or in pursuit of some sort of point, but here they just become tedious and insulting to my intelligence. Finally, Mr. McDonald does a marvelous job creating the culture of the Train Folk, the clans and basically small villages, that live upon and run these colossal trains. There's only one problem: they are utterly impossible. Once again Mr. McDonald demonstrates his utter ignorance of business practices, in this case railroad business practices. There is a reason that railroads always have been (and always will be) the most tightly controlled form of transportation from their very invention: the unpleasant consequences should two or more trains attempt to occupy the same rails at the same time, especially nuclear powered trains that tend to leave gaping, lethally radioactive craters in the event of serious malfunction. What Mr. McDonald has imagined COULD work on gargantuan trucks, ships, aircraft, or spaceships, but never, EVER on trains. It is telling that one of the final episodes in the book concerns a train ignoring all signals and forcing the clearing of all tracks ahead of it as it roars along at unacceptable speeds. Mr. McDonald would have us believe that the railroad has never had to cope with such a problem, despite centuries of itinerant privately owned and run trains! In the end despite a lot of stuff to warm this old trainiac's heart, Ares Express was a disappointment I had to force myself to keep reading until things finally picked up at the end.
3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Probably Not for Someone who Knows and Believes in Physics,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Ares Express (Paperback)
This is a fanciful book that might appeal to someone who likes fairy tales. For those of us who have been cursed with knowledge of math and physics, books like this can be difficult to get in to. I prefer science fiction books that don't violate known rules of the universe, yet bring forth fascinating possibilities and interesting story lines. I hope this helps readers decide if this book is for them.
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Ares Express by Ian McDonald (Paperback - April 27, 2010)
$17.00 $13.26
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