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Double Full Moon Night [School & Library Binding]

Gentry Lee (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)


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Hardcover --  
School & Library Binding, February 2000 --  
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Book Description

February 2000
From Gentry Lee, New York Times bestselling co-author with Arthur C. Clarke of the Rama series, comes the magnificent sequel to Bright Messengers, his first solo novel set in the Rama universe.  In Double Full Moon Night, Lee continues the saga of Johann, Beatrice, and the Martian colonists chosen to embark on one of the most thrilling and mysterious adventures in human history.

For engineer Johann Eberhardt, life has come down to this: a tiny but bountiful island inside a vast alien sphere that is both paradise and prison.  Eight years ago, Johann, accompanied by nine Martian colonists, entered the sphere with his beloved Beatrice, priestess-bishop of the Order of St.  Michael, searching for the true nature of the mystical visitors some said were extraterrestrial--and others said came from God.

Once inside the sphere, the colonists were separated and Johann has since lived in virtual isolation to raise the daughter Beatrice left behind after her tragic death.  Now the island paradise Johann shares with the child Maria has been invaded by a violent and enigmatic life-form.  Risking everything, Johann begins a dangerous journey across the water in search of safety and his fellow colonists.

It is an odyssey that is beset with deadly peril: from strange sentient creatures to imprisonment in an underwater world by a species whose motives may be benevolent.  But it is when the colonists are reunited and transported to an exotic planet that the true challenge for survival begins.

For as dissension and jealousy threaten to divide his fellow settlers, Johann is visited by Beatrice with a dire warning: Johann must learn from the planet's creatures how to survive the upcoming "double full moon night." If not, they will all be destroyed, leaving forever unanswered the secrets of the universe they have traveled so far--and sacrificed so much--to discover.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Gentry Lee, who has inherited the Rama mantle from SF legend Arthur C. Clarke, continues the story he began in Bright Messengers. In the first book, mysterious clouds of sparkling white particles beckon Beatrice and Johann into a strange craft that whisks them, and nine other colonists, from their homes on Mars to a deserted island inside a huge alien sphere. Beatrice dies after delivering a child, Maria.

As Double Full Moon Night begins, Maria has just turned 8. Their idyllic island life is suddenly ruined when a deadly creature threatens their lives, so Johann leaves his little paradise to find the other colonists. Their happy reunion is short-lived when they are transported to a strange place where they must start over and learn to survive. Lee effectively captures the sense of mystery and excitement that characterize the Rama universe. This long-awaited sequel will please fans of his first solo Rama book. --Adam Fisher --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Bizarre aliens and mysterious technologies are rife in this sequel to former NASA scientist Lee's first solo novel, Bright Messengers. Lee got his start in SF by co-authoring four novels with Sir Arthur Clarke, three of them sequels to Rendezvous with Rama, and the two books he's written on his own are both set in the Rama universe. In Bright Messengers, a group of colonists was rescued from certain death on Mars by a gigantic and mysterious alien spacecraft. Deposited on several islands within the spacecraft's inner sea, the humans have barely survived, fighting off hostile aliens as well as their own worst impulses. Now, led by Johann Eberhardt, former engineer and champion swimmer, the colonists are transported to a distant, seemingly benign planet with two moons. Eberhardt, however, is in periodic communication with someone or something that claims to be his long-dead love, Sister Beatrice of the Order of St. Michael, and this apparition has warned him that their new world will turn deadly in the near future when the two moons are full simultaneously. The colonists' survival evidently depends on Johann's ability to convince them that he has indeed spoken with Beatrice. Although this novel may appeal to admirers of the earlier Rama books, there's little here to attract new readers. Lee's prose is leaden, particularly his dialogue, and he exhibits a poor sense of pacing. Neither Johann nor any of the other colonists comes alive on the page?a flaw that robs the novel of emotional depth or power, despite its handful of moderately successful action sequences.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • School & Library Binding
  • Publisher: San Val (February 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0613248902
  • ISBN-13: 978-0613248907
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,713,301 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (10)
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What an utter waste of time, April 17, 2001
By A Customer
I waited so long for this book, I had nearly forgotten what it was supposed to be about. Apparently the author did as well. The last half of the book is a haphazard collection of incidents with very little to do with any sort of plot, except to, perhaps, explain the title of the book - which by the way, ultimately had little to do with a consistent plot other than to kill off some inconvenient characters. Lee at least had enough sense to raise some questions that I as a reader needed to have answered, otherwise I would never have finished reading it. But he should have stopped raising the more complicated questions somewhere before the final section. Had he done so, he wouldn't have had to tie things up in such a neat, improbable little package in the final 3 chapters. Don't even get me started on thin character development, and an unhealthy tendency to insert a new life form merely to lengthen the novel as a whole. And as an atheist, I found being preached to on a regular basis rather insulting.

When Lee was co-credited for some of the Rama novels, I hoped I'd found a new author whose work could at least partially fill the void left by Clarke's declining output and the total loss of Asimov's. I'm afraid I'll have to look elsewhere, because I won't subject myself again to this kind of drivel.

Frankly, the 2 stars I gave this book are generous, but unfortunately, worse books than this exist and I needed to save room for them.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Garden of Rama #2, December 8, 2000
By A Customer
Gentry Lee created an intriguing plot in Bright Messengers, and totally lost it in Double Full Moon Night. Although the beginning on the first island with Maria was good enough, it went downhill from there. After creating more alien species than I care to enumerate (some seem to have been created for their own sake) and horrible charaterization (is it a coincidence that everyone has merely one character trait?), he seems to take us out of the grotto with no idea of where he is headed. Consequently, from that point on, he falls back almost completely on "Garden of Rama" to finish this book. Johann has every good trait of Richard and Nicole, Vivien becomes a watered-down Nicole with absolutely no initiative, and Maria has every bad trait of Katie, right down to the final split into East and West Villages, which he could have copied from "Garden". Johann's experiences with the nepps and Richard's adventure in the sessile habitat on Rama are almost the same. The end of the book, however, is the worst part. With no way apparently to end his book, he goes to the (excellent) last chapters of "Rama Revealed" and tries to incorporate them into his book-mainly by killing everyone except for Johann and then creating new characters (which appears to be his favorite thing to do). Johann in the last chapters seems to even think the same thoughts as Nicole did at the end of "Revealed". The ending, unlike that of Rama or anything Clarke has written, was disappointing, unbelievable, and totally inconclusive. It raised more questions than he hoped to answer. I expected better.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great story but tie things up a bit., May 6, 2007
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I enjoyed this book and its companion Bright Messengers but I would like to see some of the Rama mystery resolved already. Mystery gets frustrating and boring after a while if no light is shed. I still really love the stories and hope for more from Mr. Lee.
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First Sentence:
JOHANN CAREFULLY PLACED eight thin twigs in the cake. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
double full moon night, quilled creatures, forehead indentations, brank brank, reed cluster, bass blasts, blue tentacles, red corridor, warrior aliens, glowing ribbon, dancing particles, brown container, alien leader, silver cylinder, water pouch, twin moons, blue sphere, human figurines, alien animals, stroke count
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sister Nuba, Sister Beatrice, Brother Johann, Brother Jose, East Village, Black Rock Promontory, Sister Vivien, Johann Eberhardt, West Village, Uncle Siegfried, Anna Kasper, Engineering Module, Habitation Module, Herr Yeager, Jesus Christ
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