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Burning the Ice
 
 
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Burning the Ice (Hardcover)

by Laura J. Mixon (Author) "That morning before breakfast Manda stopped by her work chamber to check her marine-waldos' night's work..." (more)
Key Phrases: parasol creatures, bamboo caverns, other waldos, Aculeus Septimus, Aculeus Octo, Aculeus Duo (more...)
4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Like everyone else in the tiny, struggling human colony on the isolated ice planet Brimstone, Manda is a clone--yet she is unique, and outcast, because she's a singleton. All the colonists are twins or triplets--and so is Manda, but her twin brother died at birth. Alien to her own kind, Manda prefers to work alone, exploring the sea bottoms with remote equipment. When she discovers evidence of intelligent alien life in the sea, she isn't surprised that her finding creates discord in the colony, which is on the verge of terraforming Brimstone. But she doesn't expect her surveillance of the aliens to be mysteriously cut off, she doesn't expect to fall in love, and she never dreams that the supposedly long-gone starship that placed the colonists on Brimstone might be monitoring all communications, and its crew carrying out their own malign, decades-old designs on both the colonists and natives. --Cynthia Ward

From Publishers Weekly
In this gripping and ingenious SF novel, Mixon (Astro Pilots) takes us some two centuries from now to Brimstone, a planet many light-years from Earth and settled by clones from the starship Exodus, who are trying to terraform the ice-covered world. In the forefront of this effort is Manda, a singleton (one whose cloned twin is dead), restless, inquiring and by local standards something of a sociopath. Enter a rockfall that kills the rest of her siblings and threatens to wipe out the colony from starvation. Also enter one Jim LuisMichael, friend, ally, lover and fellow explorer of the remote reaches of Brimstone. There Jim and Manda discover intelligent alien life, in the form of a gigantic organic computer, as well as a deadly plot against both the aliens and Brimstone by the remaining Exodus crew members. To keep the terraforming going, the "croche-born" in space are prepared to destroy the aliens, whom Jim and Manda foil at nearly the cost of their own lives. Then only a split in the croche-born's ranks and the heroic resistance of the colonists keep the croche-born from winning an outright war. While hardly short of action or fascinating scenes of alien contact, the novel's real strength lies in the author's depiction of the future society, with its complex system of degrees of kinship, social obligations and controls, sexual mores and even appropriate pronouns. The ending may be a little rushed, but the vivid storytelling and a high level of imagination mark this as perhaps Mixon's best work to date.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 544 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (August 17, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312869037
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312869038
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.9 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,538,381 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #3 in  Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Authors, A-Z > ( M ) > Mixon, Laura J.

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6 Reviews
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A very good story, June 27, 2003
By A Customer
Very high class space opera. :-)
A few things stretched my boundaries of believability, like the idea that a hugely expensive interstellar ship would be put in the hands of some clearly psychopathic creche children. That part was like Anne McCaffrey's "The Ship that Sang" gone horribly wrong. But it was pretty clear from the beginning that these creche children were crazy as loons. I just couldn't see that happening.

There were a few science things here and there, but it was mostly an excellent story, with an interesting alien.

A few tweaky things, like a colony filled with cloned chemists who couldn't get any base stock for food production out of an oil refinery. The refinery wasn't explained either, nor the source of the oil on this nearly lifeless icebound planet.

There was an odd bit about the colonists needing to hold back on terraforming, raising the planet's temperature. If the alien is 5 kilometers down, living on undersea lavaflows and vents that raise water temp to 200 degrees C, how is it going to be harmed by raising the surface temperature?

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mysteries above and below, May 17, 2003
By Liz Fox "foxyshadis" (Modesto, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In a small colony of clones trying to eck out a living on a freezing moon in a distant star system, Mandy, a loner in a very clique-based society, pilots undersea waldoes to explore the world. The syntellect Ur-Carli leads her one day to a frozen room with the corpse of the colony's first leader, Carli, along with a telescope, console, and more, informing her that the ship carrying the crèche-born is still in orbit, not gone as everyone thought, and spying on them. Life went on otherwise... until a massive cave-in smashes important systems, disrupts the colony, and kills her sister.

Strange discrepancies start to pop up, like one of Manda's waldos losing contact but still responding to signals, and when she takes proof of the crèche-born's presence to her elder siblings, they summarily erase it, explaining that their presence has been known but covered up in hopes they would leave. Next she's packing and off to check on that unresponsive waldo, and at the drill site she gets a minute of contact  and a glimpse of native life!  before all is black again. She and Jim, a sonar specialist she rapidly becomes close to, suspect outside interference.

Now she wants to take a trip down for herself, in an old underwater vessel. From a pariah she becomes a hero, inspiring hope in the wake of tragedy. Under the ice Manda and Jim find that the crèche-born's control is much greater and more dangerous than they ever believed. Manda has to get back to warn the others, but even if that is possible, will it be in time?

It does take a while to get moving; the first hundred pages are mostly angsty exposition and overexploration of the culture. In many ways it reselmbles a society based entirely on a high-school social culture, full of cliques, grudges, "coup" (owed favors, particularly political) that forms a barter system and family power, and petty jealousies. Manda is very excluded, and perhaps Mixon spends too much time showing us just how much. But the emotional troubles are real, painful to read, and after the cave-in and death she and her family seem more real. Though often at odds, they are all painted sympathetically, not an easy task. Family loyalty is a recurring theme; it may not be the strongest bond, but it is the most permanent. I didn't get quite enough sense of how old everyone was, though, not until near the end.

Once the story does pick up, it takes off and never lets up. Throughout the explorations and ruminations is a strong undercurrent of confusion, distress, and haste, never settling into idleness. The feelings for Jim aren't as throughly explored, just because everyone's distracted by too much going on in the meantime. All of the people seem credible, each with their own faults and distictions and hearts. Even the schizophrentic crèche-born. Many things just plain don't make sense for a while, but all is slowly revealed, settling down to a satisfying conclusion. I highly recommend.

This is a sequel to Proxies, but I'd have never known. I didn't need to read it to understand the story. This could possibly be mined for a sequel, years down the line (dealing with renewed contact from Earth, and the alien?), but anything sooner would be a stretch. I for one look forward to any effort in this direction.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping suspense/science with characters&world that rocks, April 11, 2003
By Terry Holland (Blaine, WA United States) - See all my reviews
Burning the Ice starts slowly, but hang in there for this is one of those rare novels like Dune that is deep, true to it's heart, and worth savoring. The characters, world environment, political situation, and plot are delivered with excellent pacing, depth and richness of detail, and total integrity.

Brimstone is an early find in extra-solar system space exploration settled by a group of clones fleeing from an early and controversial expedition from earth. It is a cold, harsh moon of a jovian-like planet habitable only for the desperate.

Manda is a singleton clone ostracized in this society where everyone else thrives in pairs/triplets/etc. Her creative drive, ascerbic nature, and absolute unwillingness to quit drive a novel rich in detail and perfect in pace. The first contact is brilliantly conceived, the human interaction and dialogue rich and consistent, and you will find yourself wondering if this just might be a glimpse into the future.

This may be the best hard SF novel of the year.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, thoughtful sf thriller
Clones, colonization, love, death, alien intelligences, artificial intelligence, a twisted take on how well encasing human beings and forcing them to interact with the world... Read more
Published on April 22, 2005 by Elisabeth Carey

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful mix of personal growth, world-building, science
The clone colony desperately hung to life on an ice world. Denied the full technological advantages of its spaceship-borne cousins, the colony strives to teraform its planet--but... Read more
Published on November 26, 2002 by booksforabuck

5.0 out of 5 stars cerebral, fast-paced thriller
Almost fifty light years from earth, Brimstone is an icy moon in which the inhabitants are descendants of clones of exiles who fled earth over a century ago. Read more
Published on August 17, 2002 by Harriet Klausner

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