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The Throne of Saturn [Mass Market Paperback]

Allen Drury (Author)
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher: Avon; 6th THUS edition
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038022996X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380229963
  • Average Customer Review: 2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
2.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Flight to Mars via the Moon, December 30, 2008
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Novel about a Post-Apollo manned flight to the moon in preparation for the manned flights to mars in the 1980s that would have used Saturn Vs. As much political as it is science fiction. Interesting to read in light of the current plan to fly to Mars via Moon.
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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars moribund political tome never gets off the ground, June 27, 2005
"Throne of Saturn", a political novel about the first manned mission to Mars, was also my introduction to the world of Pulitzer Prize-winner Alan Drury. If you've read any of the books in the "Advise and Consent" series, then nothing will surprise you here - least of all the fact that the book, which bills itself "a novel of space and politics", has next-to nothing to do with the exploration of space, but is really about the politics and dirty tricks of Drury's perennial enemies - the media and America's left.

Set in the near future, when man has already landed on the moon, NASA plans an even greater leap to Mars. The stage is set for a spectacular showcase of technology and man surviving at its leading edge. Instead, Drury serves up a bland morality play in which intellectuals, liberal politicians, organized labor and the media (the triumvirate of the radical left) tries to co-opt the mission to serve their own liberal agenda. Whether its the racial makeup of the crew or cooperation with the Russians (who never cooperate despite the left's insistence to the contrary), nothing NASA does is right for the book's liberal villains. Drury's heroes are meant to be astronauts but they spend less time in space than on the ground where they are victimized by the left for their patriotism and their staunch opposition to the left. Drury has a reputation for hitting hard at liberals, but "Throne" illustrates less of an attack on liberal principles than dependency on the anti-leftist antipathy of his readers. Drury doesn't so much hit on liberals as remind his readers that he simply doesn't like them. As in other books, Drury has his media fixtures embodied by the chiefs of various newspapers, but they are named only according to their publications; among other villains are a few real-life lefties are described without names, but in ways that leave no doubt as to their identity (Dr. Spock puts in an appearance as the casualty of a botched sabotage-riot on the day of the Mars launch). Stuck to create a real villain, Drury gives us two wayward souls: a columnist dubbed "Percy have Mercy" who finds himself with the power to direct the national will for or against the mission; and the mission's sole African American - a black astronaut who nurses a monster chip on his shoulder, and is convinced above all of his victim hood.

"Throne", written during the Vietnam war, mirrors the national chaos of the 1960's, but manages not to explain why the liberals were so fired up. (In contrast, though not entirely approving, Apollo era-Leftists were somewhat muted despite the fact that Vietnam made it fashionable to distrust any splashy government program). Drury's liberals aren't so much unprincipled as they are simply scheming, cowardly and dishonest. No liberal aims or principles exist in Drury's universe. As in "Come Nineveh", the left exists merely to emasculate America and tear it down, rather than compliment the right and balance its flaws. Though Drury may be convinced that he pounds mercilessly on his liberals, he misses liberalism entirely in "Throne". Percy, who is introduced early on, doesn't seem liberal at all - coming off as a somewhat effete Walter Winchell type. There was also a quirk in the way he speaks in which he repeated his dialog ("I do", he said "Indeed I do") though it's clear that everybody in the book speaks like him. Everybody but the Russians, who don't so much as say dialog as much as sneer it.

The biggest insult is how close to Earth "Throne" remains. Though Drury posits his conservatives as principled humans who only want to further human exploration, Drury himself is eager to escape the confines of Earth and its complicated disputes as his liberals are. It's no surprise that Mars remains out of reach of Drury's Earthbound prose. With no liberal-elite-dominated media to mess things up on that distant planet, just what would these astronauts do when they got to Mars? Indeed, what would they do?
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5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the most popular novels. . ., February 20, 2002
. . .by the late Allen Drury, this "novel of space and politics" is also a social commentary on the decay of society during the 1960's. In addition, Drury's understanding of communism (and communism's defenders in the media and union leadership) was ahead of his time.

Granted, the book is dated now, but at the time of its printing, it bordered on prophetic.

As an aside, I strongly suspect that Mr. Drury was deeply saddened at what didn't happen with the US Space program. His "moon landing" was only a few years ahead of reality; ditto with his "space station".

An enjoyable read.

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