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River of Dust [Hardcover]

Alexander Jablokov (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Willam Morrow (1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380972646
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380972647
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.7 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,368,096 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Alexander Jablokov writes science fiction for readers who won't give up literate writing or vivid characters to get the thrills they demand. He is a natural transition for non-SF readers interested in taking a stroll with a dangerous AI or a neurosurgeon/jazz musician turned detective, while still giving hardcore SF fans speculative flash, incomprehensible aliens, and kitchen appliances with insect wing cases.

From his well-regarded first novel, Carve the Sky, an interplanetary espionage novel set in a culturally complex 25th century, through the obscenely articulate dolphins with military modifications of a Deeper Sea, the hardboiled post-cyberpunk of Nimbus, the subterranean Martian repression of River of Dust, and the perverse space opera of Deepdrive, he has come to Brain Thief, a contemporary high-tech thriller with a class clown attitude.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
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2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Overlooked but powerful, March 5, 1998
By 
E. L. Green (San Jose, CA, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: River of Dust (Paperback)
I have followed Alexander Jablakov's work since his powerful short stories in Asimov's back in the 1980's. Nobody else seems to know who he is. Anyhow: River of Dust is his most powerful to date. The society is riveting, its history mysterious, and the central tale -- the tale of three siblings (one of whom we never meet) -- is tragedy as Shakespeare would have written if he had written science fiction. I only give a 10 to a novel that I want to immediately re-read, but this one makes it to my "I will re-read it when I run out of new books to read" list (the 9 list).
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great world development and vivid setting but confusing plot and characters, February 28, 2007
By 
Tim F. Martin (Madison, AL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: River of Dust (Paperback)
_River of Dust_ by Alexander Jablokov is a science fiction novel set on the planet Mars several centuries into the future. Humanity has resided on the Red Planet for several hundred years and has started to develop its own culture there. Early, starry-eyed attempts at surface habitats and terraforming have been abandoned, as Martian society is an urban and underground one. There are large cities on Mars, or rather in Mars, tunneled through the Martian rock, sometimes peeking at the sky above through heavily shielded windows, but more often very deep underground.

The best thing about the book is its portrayal of the Martian cities (particularly of the main setting of the book, the city of Scamander). The author did a good job of portraying Mars as a distinct culture, as a country, with its own fashion, fads, sense of decorum and of honor, relationships between government and the governed, politics, holidays, festivals, dreaded figures from its past, etc. The reader is not eased into Martian society but rather pretty much thrown into it and for a time it was difficult going but eventually understandable. It almost reminded me of watching Shakespeare performed or hearing the quick banter of interwar British high society types in a _Poirot_ movie; hard to comprehend at first, maybe even baffling, but after a time you get used to it and don't even notice it after a time.

The worst thing about the book though is its complex, difficult to understand plot, one of politics, intrigue, and family feuds. In one sense, the novel is about who has control over Mars, which political faction, whether Earth or one of the ones native to Mars, whether its own government (nominally independent of Earth) or another faction, that of the Pure Land School, lead by an individual named Rudolf Hounslow. Within this struggle various organizations fight politically with one another even though they agree on overall goals (two military/police organizations - Internal Security or InSec and the Vigil - clash quite a bit over jurisdiction and methods in the book). In another sense, it is also a tale of family tragedy, of the rise and fall of a once great family and in particular two brothers, Hektor and Breyton Passman and their father, Lon, a family still haunted by a past in which the Passman brother's mother and sister had died and torn apart in the present by divided loyalties in the Byzantine politics of Mars.

Byzantine plots in and of themselves might not be such a problem and I knew going into the novel that Martian politics would be a major theme, but I was hampered by the fact that I never really understood some of the actors. What motivated Hounslow and the Pure Land School (or one of their acolytes, Brenda Marr, who was a major character)? What did they want? They wanted to control Mars, but what made them different from any other faction? They were described as Neo-Confucian, but what did that mean? They spoke a few times of the purity of the Martian surface, but was that just a sense of aesthetics or did they seriously think that Martian society would give up the vast underground cities, given how difficult if not impossible life would be on the surface? Brenda Marr herself was a complete enigma; I never once understood her motives. Was I supposed to?

With regard to the Passman brothers, I felt Jablokov didn't quite flesh them out well enough. Despite them being the main characters, I never quite understood why they were estranged, or why they chose the sides that they did, which detracted some from any sense of tragedy that the author was building towards. He did a nice job of describing their great home, Xui House, once a fine noble building that was the center of attention, now largely empty, but their motivations never quite clicked with me

In the end, I have mixed feelings about the novel. I thought it had a promising beginning, and the end, while exciting in some ways was also confusing in others. On the one hand the book had one of the finest portraits of a possible, future Mars but on the other hand its heavily political plot to me at least never quite gelled. A good effort though.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A prequel to Carve the Sky, March 20, 2007
By 
This review is from: River of Dust (Hardcover)
River of Dust is a prequel of sorts to Jablokov's first novel, Carve the Sky. An expansion of his novella "Syrtis," it tells the story of brothers Hektor and Breyton Passman, sons of famous Martian political figure Lon Passman. Hektor, the younger brother, is pursuing the political career Breyton abandoned. Breyton, more passionate and exuberant than Hektor, is waiting for inspiration to strike and show him his path in life.

The Passmans live in Scamander, a city located underneath the hostile surface of the red planet. The subterranean populace of Mars is divided into two classes-the well-educated upper class, which includes the Passmans, and the rough and tumble working class. This centuries old caste system is experiencing upheaval, due to the radical philosophies of Rudolf Hounslow. Hounslow's followers, known as the Pure Land School, have launched a terrorist strike, assassinating a relatively harmless colonial official.

The assassination triggers a series of events which eventually find the brothers on opposite sides of a civil war. Breyton joins the Pure Land School, while Hektor deals with the political fallout, eventually designing a Machiavellian plot to crush the rebels. The conflict takes its toll on the Passmans, costing the lives of friends and family, and forcing the two young men even further apart.

Jablokov's characters are complex, colorful and believable, as are their relationships. The setting, the claustrophobic caverns of Mars, is intriguing, as are its effects on Martian society. Martians are a special breed, and Jablokov revels in their idiosyncrasies. Especially enjoyable is the Martian penchant for theatrical gestures, the catalyst for many memorable scenes.

The book's major problems stem from the author's failure to detail the underpinnings of the societal conflict at novel's center. Rupert Hounslow's beliefs initiate momentous events, yet are never fully expounded. The aristocracy's side (i.e. preserving the status quo) is reasonably clear, but the agenda of the Pure Land School is never fully explored. Was this a sizable movement, or merely a bunch of rabble rousers who succeeded in disrupting Martian society? The reader never knows what is really at stake.

However, these flaws are far from fatal. Jablokov delivers a finely crafted story with several well-drawn characters and intriguing plot twists. Having had a taste of Mars, discerning readers may hope that Jablokov will soon revisit this fertile territory.
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