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Green Mars (Mars Trilogy)

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Book overview

Winner of the Hugo Award for Best Novel • Kim Stanley Robinson’s classic trilogy depicting the colonization of Mars continues in a thrilling and timeless novel that pits the settlers against their greatest foes: themselves.

“One of the major sagas of the [latest] generation in science fiction.”
Chicago Sun-Times
 
Nearly a generation has passed since the first pioneers landed on Mars, and its transformation to an Earthlike planet is under way. But not everyone wants to see the process through. The methods are opposed by those determined to preserve their home planet’s hostile, barren beauty. Led by the first generation of children born on Mars, these rebels are soon joined by a handful of the original settlers. Against this cosmic backdrop, passions, partnerships, and rivalries explode in a story as spectacular as the planet itself.

Review

“Dense as a diamond and as sharp; it makes even most good novels seem pale and insignificant by comparison.”The Washington Post Book World

“Grand in scope, meticulous in detail.”
The New York Times Book Review

From the Inside Flap

In the Nebula Award winning Red Mars, Kim Stanley Robinson began his critically acclaimed epic saga of the colonization of Mars, Now the Hugo Award winning Green Mars continues the thrilling and timeless tale of humanity's struggle to survive at its farthest frontier.

Nearly a generation has passed since the first pioneers landed, but the transformation of Mars to an Earthlike planet has just begun The plan is opposed by those determined to preserve the planets hostile, barren beauty. Led by rebels like Peter Clayborne, these young people are the first generation of children born on Mars. They will be joined by original settlers Maya Toitovna, Simon Frasier, and Sax Russell. Against this cosmic backdrop, passions, rivalries, and friendships explode in a story as spectacular as the planet itself.

From the Back Cover

“One of the major sagas of the [latest] generation in science fiction.”
--
Chicago Sun-Times

“Yet another masterpiece ...I can't imagine anybody else staking out any portion of this immemorial dreamscape with the same elegant detail and thoroughness, it's Kim Stanley Robinson's now and for a long time to come"
--
Science Fiction Age

About the Author

Kim Stanley Robinson is a winner of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus awards. He is the author of more than twenty books, including the bestselling Mars trilogy and the critically acclaimed Forty Signs of Rain, Fifty Degrees Below, Sixty Days and Counting, The Years of Rice and Salt, and Galileo’s Dream. In 2008 he was named one of Time magazine’s “Heroes of the Environment.” He serves on the board of the Sierra Nevada Research Institute. He lives in Davis, California.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

The point is not to make another Earth. Not another Alaska or Tibet, not a Vermont nor a Venice, not even an Antarctica. The point is to make something new and strange, something Martian.

In a sense our intentions don't even matter. Even if we try to make another Siberia or Sahara, it won't work. Evolution won't allow it, and at its heart this is an evolutionary process, an endeavor driven at a level below intention, as when life made its first miracle leap out of matter, or when it crawled out of sea onto land.

Again we struggle in the matrix of a new world, this time truly alien. Despite the great long glaciers left by the giant floods of 2061, it is a very arid world; despite the beginnings of atmosphere creation, the air is still very thin; despite all the applications of heat, the average temperature is still well below freezing. All these conditions make survival for living things difficult in the extreme. But life is tough and adaptable, it is the green force viriditas, pushing into the universe. In the decade following the catastrophes of 2061, people struggled in the cracked domes and torn tents, patching things up and getting by; and in our hidden refuges, the work of building a new society went on. And out on the cold surface new plants spread over the flanks of the glaciers, and down into the warm low basins, in a slow inexorable surge.

Of course all the genetic templates for our new biota are Terran; the minds designing them are Terran; but the terrain is Martian. And terrain is a powerful genetic engineer, determining what flourishes and what doesn't, pushing along progressive differentiation, and thus the evolution of new species. And as the generations pass, all the members of a biosphere evolve together, adapting to their terrain in a complex communal response, a creative self-designing. ability. This process, no matter how much we intervene in it, is essentially out of our control. Genes mutate, creatures evolve: a new biosphere emerges, and with it anew noosphere. And eventually the designers' minds, along with everything else, have been forever changed.

This is the process of areoformation.



One day the sky fell. Plates of ice crashed into the lake, and then started thumping on the beach. The children scattered like frightened sandpipers. Nirgal tan over the dunes to the village and burst into the greenhouse, shouting, "The sky is falling, the sky is falling!" Peter sprinted out the doors and across the dunes faster than Nirgal could follow.

Back on the beach great panes of ice stabbed the sand, and some chunks of dry ice fizzed in the water of the lake. When the children were all clumped around him Peter stood with his head craned back, staring at the dome so far above. "Back to the village,” he said in his no-nonsense tone. On the way there he laughed. "The sky is falling!" he squeaked, tousling Nirgal's hair. Nirgal blush and Dao and Jackie laughed, their frosted breath shooting out in quick white plumes.

Peter was one of those who climbed the side of the dome to repair it. He and Kasei and Michel spidered over the village in sight of all, over the beach and then the lake until they were smaller than children, hanging in slings from ropes attached to icehooks. They sprayed the flaw in the dome with water until it froze into a new clear layer, coating the white dry ice. When they came down they talked of the warming world outside. Hiroko had come out of her little bamboo stand by the lake to watch, and Nirgal said to her,

"Will we have to leave?"

"We will always have to leave," Hiroko said. "Nothing on Mars will last."


But Nirgal liked it under the dome. In the morning he woke in his own round bamboo room, high in Creche Crescent, and ran down to the frosty dunes with Jackie and Rachel and Frantz and the other early risers. He saw Hiroko on the far shore, walking the beach like a dancer, floating over her own wet reflection. He wanted to go to her but it was time for school.

They went back to the village and crowded into the schoolhouse coatroom, hanging up their down jackets and standing with their blue hands stretched over the heating grate, waiting for the day's teacher. It could be Dr. Robot and they would be bored senseless, counting his blinks like the seconds on the clock. It could be the Good Witch, old and ugly, and then they would be back outside building all day, exuberant with the joy of tools. Or it could be the Bad Witch, old and beautiful, and they would be stuck before their lecterns all morning trying to think in Russian, in danger of a rap on the hand if they giggled or fell asleep. The Bad Witch had silver hair and a fierce glare and a hooked nose, like the ospreys that lived in the pines by the lake. Nirgal was afraid of her.

So like the others he concealed his dismay as the school door opened and the Bad Witch walked in. But on this day she seemed tired, and let them out on time even though they had done poorly at arithmetic. Nirgal followed Jackie and Dan our of the schoolhouse and around the corner, into the alley between Creche Crescent and the back of the kitchen. Dan peed against the wall and Jackie pulled down her pants to show she could too, and just then the Bad Witch came around the corner. She pulled them all out of the alley by the arm, Nirgal and Jackie clutched together in one of her talons, and right out in the plaza she spanked Jackie while shouting furiously at the boys. "You two stay away from her! She's your sister!" Jackie, crying and twisting to pull up her pants, saw Nirgal looking at her, and she tried to hit him and Maya with the same furious swing, and fell over bare-bottomed and howled.


It wasn't true that Jackie was their sister. There were twelve sansei or third-generation children in Zygote, and they knew e other like brothers and sisters and many of them were, but not all. It was confusing and seldom discussed. Jackie and Dao were oldest, Nirgal a season younger, the rest bunched a season after that: Rachel, Emily, Reull, Steve, Simud, Nanedi, Tiu, Frantz, a Huo Hsing. Hiroko was mother to everyone in Zygote, but not really—only to Nirgal and Dan and six other of the sansei, and several of the nisei grownups as well. Children of the mother goddess.

But Jackie was Esther's daughter. Esther had moved away after a fight with Kasei, who was Jackie's father. Not many of them Irn who their fathers were. Once Nirgal had been crawling over a dune after a crab when Esther and Kasei had loomed overhead, Esther crying and Kasei shooting, "If you're going to leave me then leave!

He had been crying too. He had a pink stone eyetooth. He too had been a child of Hiroko's; so Jackie was Hiroko's granddaughter. That was how it worked. Jackie had long black hair and was the fastest runner in Zygote, except for Peter. Nirgal could run the longe and sometimes ran around the lake three or four times in a to just to do it, but Jackie was faster in the sprints. She laughed all the time, If Nirgal ever argued with her she would say, "All right Uncle Nirgie," and laugh at him. She was his niece, although a season older. But not his sister.


The school door crashed open and there was Coyote, teacher for the day. Coyote traveled all over the world, and spent very little time in Zygote. It was a big day when he taught them. He led the around the village finding odd things to do, but all the time he made one of them read aloud, from books impossible to understand, written by philosophers, who were dead people. Bakunin, Nietzsche, Mao, Bookchin—these people's comprehensible thoughts lay like unexpected pebbles on a long beach of gibberish. The stories Coyote had them read from the Odyssey or the Bible were easier to understand, though unsettling, as the people in them killed each other a lot and Hiroko said it was wrong. Coyote laughed at Hiroko and he often howled for no obvious reason as they read these gruesome tales, and asked them hard questions about what they had heard, and argued with them as if they knew what they were talking about, which was disconcerting.

"What would you do? Why would you do that?" All the while teaching ad them how the Rickover's fuel recycler worked, or making them all check the plunger hydraulics on the lake's wave machine, until their hands went from blue to white, and their teeth chattered so much they couldn't talk clearly. "You kids sure get cold easy," he said. "All but Nirgal."

Nirgal was good with cold. He knew intimately all its many stages, and he did not dislike the feel of it. People who disliked cold did not understand that one could adjust to it, that its bad effects could all be dealt with by a sufficient push from within. Nirgal was very familiar with heat as well. If you pushed heat out hard enough, then cold only became a sort of vivid shocking envelope in which you moved. And so cold's ultimate effect was as a stimulant, making you want to run.

"Hey Nirgal, what's the air temperature?"

"Two seventy-one."

Coyote's laugh was scary, an animal cackle that included all the noises anything could make. Different every time too. "Here, let's stop the wave machine and see what the lake looks like flat."

The water of the lake was always liquid, while the water ice all coating the underside of the dome had to stay frozen. This explained most of their mesocosmic weather, as Sax put it, giving them their mists and sudden winds, their rain and fog and occasional snow.

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Kim Stanley Robinson has won the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards. He is the author of over twenty previous books, including the bestselling Mars trilogy and the highly acclaimed FORTY SIGNS OF RAIN. He lives in Davis, California.

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Customers say

Customers find the book brilliant, brilliant, and worth reading. They praise the research quality as erudite, well-researched, and thought-provoking. Readers appreciate the poetic descriptions of Mars features. They describe the book as exciting, engaging, and dynamic. They also appreciate the wonderful images, imagination, and style of the writing. Opinions are mixed on the story quality, with some finding it memorable, while others say it lacks novelty and drama.

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48Customers mention
35Positive
13Negative

Customers find the book brilliant, brilliant, and satisfying. They also say it's detailed and exciting, with no boring parts.

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"...So detailed and exciting. No boring parts...." Read more

"...A great thinkers tomb and a riveting read for anybody pondering why the world cannot collaborate." Read more

"...names are occasionally misspelled, words missing, some sentences inartfully constructed...." Read more

"...I will say that the final part "Phase Change" is very rewarding to read...." Read more

44Customers mention
44Positive
0Negative

Customers find the book erudite, well-researched, and thought-provoking. They appreciate the fascinating science and descriptions. Readers also mention the discussions are intricate and interesting.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

"...Its a big book...over 600 pages but reads well and quick. So detailed and exciting. No boring parts...." Read more

"...and drama of the first iteration, but it's still just as literate, erudite and compelling as Red Mars...." Read more

"...that arise, simply because it exists, that it is beautiful and astonishing and strange...." Read more

"...A great thinkers tomb and a riveting read for anybody pondering why the world cannot collaborate." Read more

10Customers mention
10Positive
0Negative

Customers find the book's characterization exquisite, detailed, and poetic. They also appreciate the incredible research done on Mars geology. Readers describe the trilogy as brilliant and compelling.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

"...Read Green Mars also 5 stars fantastic. This is the best Sci Fi trilogy on Mars colonization and Terra Forming...." Read more

"...first iteration, but it's still just as literate, erudite and compelling as Red Mars. Still, it is not flawless on the copy-editing front...." Read more

"The first book in this trilogy, *Red Mars*, is a brilliant tale of interplanetary exploration and colonization, rife with human drama and supported..." Read more

"Kim Stanley Robinson may be a new prophet. His exquisitely detailed view of Martian exploration and colonization and the future of technology and..." Read more

9Customers mention
9Positive
0Negative

Customers find the book exciting, engaging, and intellectually stimulating. They appreciate the action and adventure parts throughout. Readers also mention the vivid characters in an impressive and dynamic world.

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"...So detailed and exciting. No boring parts...." Read more

"...It's a powerful array and makes for a compulsively readable, intellectually stimulating and often quite moving epic -- an intimate epic, the best..." Read more

"...Not always a gripping page turner, but deeply engaging and intellectually stimulating." Read more

"...Robinson is also able to describe vivid characters in an equally impressive and dynamic world...." Read more

9Customers mention
9Positive
0Negative

Customers find the images wonderful, stylish, and marvel at the artistry of the writer. They also appreciate the high-definition graphics that give a realistic sense of what Mars could be one day. Readers also mention the book grips their imaginations in such a way that they become fascinated with anything they read.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

"...difficulties that arise, simply because it exists, that it is beautiful and astonishing and strange...." Read more

"...Graphics are provide in high definition on a separate web sight." Read more

"...Robinson gives an extremely vivid picture of a possible (if unlikely) future on Mars with good characterization...." Read more

"Wonderful images and imagination. Gives a realistic sense of what Mars could or should not be one day. Recommend it." Read more

57Customers mention
39Positive
18Negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the story quality. Some say they enjoy the stories, marvel at the concepts, and expect it to be a memorable trilogy. However, others say the story is dragged out and lacks some of the novelty and drama of the first iteration. They also mention the narrative only becomes coherent around 300 pages into the book.

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"...flaws, and personalities. The characters and the story are easy to fall in love with but challenging to read...." Read more

"...some old problems, some interesting new problems - and the plot begins developing nicely...." Read more

"...Like any sequel, it lacks some of the novelty and drama of the first iteration, but it's still just as literate, erudite and compelling as Red Mars...." Read more

"...for a compulsively readable, intellectually stimulating and often quite moving epic -- an intimate epic, the best kind...." Read more

20Customers mention
13Positive
7Negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book. Some mention the eyes of some of the most beautifully developed characters to be found in all of literature, while others say they're uninteresting.

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"...No boring parts. Kim Stanley Robinson is great with character development and so detailed in his Mars landscape descriptions...." Read more

"...That said, many of the characters are still completely unlikeable and the plot device of “the treatment” is a little overdone..." Read more

"...Character development continues, the science is considerable, and the problems are scarily plausible...." Read more

"Well thought out series with lots of interesting characters. I loved it. I am very impressed with the plot development...." Read more

15Customers mention
10Positive
5Negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book. Some mention it's well-written, thought-provoking, and heavy. However, others say the Kindle version is filled with typographical errors and complete misspellings.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

"...the novelty and drama of the first iteration, but it's still just as literate, erudite and compelling as Red Mars...." Read more

"...However all the characters are well written and through their actions, thoughts, and expressed values the reader sees multiple dimensions of their..." Read more

"...The Kindle version is filled with typographical errors too...." Read more

"...It's a powerful array and makes for a compulsively readable, intellectually stimulating and often quite moving epic -- an intimate epic, the best..." Read more

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Top reviews from the United States

5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
2nd of Sci Fi trilogy. Best Mars colonizing and Mars terraforming
Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2010
Read Red Mars 5 stars fantastic.Read my review. Read Green Mars also 5 stars fantastic. This is the best Sci Fi trilogy on Mars colonization and Terra Forming. Its a big book...over 600 pages but reads well and quick. So detailed and exciting. No boring parts.... See more
Read Red Mars 5 stars fantastic.Read my review.

Read Green Mars also 5 stars fantastic. This is the best Sci Fi trilogy on Mars colonization and Terra Forming. Its a big book...over 600 pages but reads well and quick. So detailed and exciting. No boring parts. Kim Stanley Robinson is great with character development and so detailed in his Mars landscape descriptions. Here a little of this exciting epic classic.

Now there are hundreds of thousands on Mars in various cities and small dome/tent facilities. Earth is having major problems with famine, wars and the West Antarctic ice sheet dropping off and melting and raising the sea level 6 meters. The big mega internationals are still trying to control Mars and only about 10% of earth's population has been given the treatment for extending life( may live a thousand years). The rest are starving and dieing.

Kim Stanley Robinson still has the second elevator from Mars to asteroid Clarke 2 . The Mega Internationale's Earth police goon squads keep trying to put Mars in "order". Reinforcements are transported down the ""elevator" ( The elevator is too improbable to me). The elevator allows spaceships from earth to land on asteroid Clarke2 and save fuel by bypassing mars gravity well.

There is the second revolution and Burroughs Mar's largest city is flooded by the extremist "Reds" ( don't want terraforming and leave Mars like it was). The police goon squads are forced to leave and concentrate at Sheffield another Mars city where the "Elevator" is. Hundreds of thousands of Burroughs citizens escape and walk out of Burroughs wearing filters and heavy clothing. They then board trains to other cities. A very narrow escape!The underground shoots down military space and communications platforms around Mars and keep their own communications intact.

Major 2nd revolution that this time succeeds. Lots of Terra Forming going on and now in low parts people are able to breath temporarily with the help of filters outside of domes but it still very cold like Siberia but now there is liquid water part time in the Summer on parts of low level Mars. A big Megainternational named Praxis is now helping Mars and trying to help Earth with its own disaster.

I give Green Mars a 4 1/2 star rating because of the "elevator" which in the near future of a hundred years I don't think the technology will be there but will list it as 5 stars as its an epic and the best Mars colonization/ terraforming trilogy ever. See the many big wheels like Arthur C Clarke and scientist Robert Zubrin's high praise for this classic Mars trilogy epic.

Reading Blue Mars and so far its great. Will post review.
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4.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Could Not Not Read This Book
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2013
After finishing Red Mars (which was not short), I waited all of fifteen minutes before downloading the sequel. Geen Mars elaborates and continues the political and economic plot lines set up in Red Mars, and I found it thorooughly engaging. Robinson clearly has... See more
After finishing Red Mars (which was not short), I waited all of fifteen minutes before downloading the sequel. Geen Mars elaborates and continues the political and economic plot lines set up in Red Mars, and I found it thorooughly engaging.

Robinson clearly has some political and economic biases. Strongly pro-democratic, he is impatient with those who seek to establish dictatorial methods for short term expedience, well-recognizing that there's always an emergency that can rationalize the lust for power. He is also extremly skeptical of the benefits of untammelled capitalism with its greed, selfishness, dictatorial and dehumaninizing methods and utter disregard of community interests at large. Instead, he pushes a different (left of center) model of cooperative ownership by employees, which may or may not function in the real world. (There is enough experience now to say that one can not generalize.) The arguments, however--which occupy numerous pages--are lucid, reasonable and compelling, even if the conclusions are not what might occur in the world today.

Like any sequel, it lacks some of the novelty and drama of the first iteration, but it's still just as literate, erudite and compelling as Red Mars. Still, it is not flawless on the copy-editing front. Character names are occasionally misspelled, words missing, some sentences inartfully constructed. These are all errrors than an alert editor would have picked up and corrected without fuss. Hopefully these silly errors will be corrected in later editions.
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5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Green Mars, a textbook scifi
Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2013
Speculative science fiction, when done well, can feel like a yet to be fulfilled prophecy. Kim Stanley Robinson achieves this feeling in his novel Green Mars. Green Mars is the second installment of Robinson's epic opus, The Mars Trilogy. Evidence of the book's popularity... See more
Speculative science fiction, when done well, can feel like a yet to be fulfilled prophecy. Kim Stanley Robinson achieves this feeling in his novel Green Mars. Green Mars is the second installment of Robinson's epic opus, The Mars Trilogy. Evidence of the book's popularity among scientific crowds is the fact that Green Mars was included in the payload of the 2008 Phoenix expedition to the planet Mars. It is among the first books in the Interplanetary Library.
An initial warning: Red Mars, the first book of Kim Stanley Robinson's trilogy, should be read prior to reading Green Mars. The trilogy is not a series of stand alone story arcs that can be coherently read out of order. Red Mars and Green Mars were published a scant 13 months apart in 1993 and 1994. This quick publishing turn around time and the fact that the books are over half a thousand pages each leads one to believe that both books were finished at the same time. While this is just speculation (although I'm sure Kim Stanley Robinson has addressed this matter in interviews in the past 20 years), one can continue to speculate as to why the story was published slightly over a year apart in two different books. Perhaps the author wanted to double his entries in the Hugo and Nebula sweepstakes (Red Mars won the Nebula in 1993, Green Mars won the Hugo 1994). Perhaps the editor thought the tome would be too ponderous for a single book. Perhaps the publisher (Spectra/Bantam Dell/Random House) wanted the profits from two books instead of just one. Whatever the reason, just make sure, even though you are presently reading a review of Green Mars, that you read Red Mars first.
Green Mars is set in the near future and is centered around the populating and terraforming of Mars by immigrants from Earth and native born Martians. Green Mars weaves into its plot many other speculative science fiction devices in addition to terraforming. Medical advancements that double or triple the human lifespan play heavily into the story's plot. Other major plot conflicts include environmental disasters and protection (both on Earth and Mars), political dominance by multinational corporations, population growth, and battles over and with advanced technologies such as space elevators, orbiting solar mirrors, and the medicinal treatments for prolonging life. The story is extremely multifaceted and epic in scope. The trilogy spans about 150 years. Green Mars is not particularly light reading, but the story and the science in the story will not soon leave a reader's hippocampus.
Kim Stanley Robinson employs a narrative style common to fictional mega-epics with a large cast of characters. The story is told from a third person perspective that is limited to a single character's point of view per chapter. The point of view character alternates every chapter so that the reader can get an idea of everything going on all around Mars. The author creates a linear fluidity to the story this way.
This narrative method also allows Kim Stanley Robinson to show off his multiple disciplinary, scientific interests. Depending on the point of view character, the author will use that character's specialty to wax informatively on various fields of science such as geology, environmental science, physics, solar system astronomy, biology, botany, sociology, psychology, philosophy, humanities, economics, mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, social engineering, military science, political science, and even a dash of religion. Often the story is secondary and/or dependent on the description of the sciences (and speculative sciences). Attention and focus is required to follow the story through these interesting, college-level, intellectual interruptions. It is impossible to read Green Mars and not learn something.
This will turn off some readers who are only interested in a Mars themed, thrill ride adventure story. If that is what you want, try Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land or Edgar Rice Burrough's A Princess of Mars. Green Mars is written for a "hard science fiction" fan base that is interested in intellectualism as much as literary entertainment.
The characters, especially the point of view characters, in Green Mars are primarily archetypes of different kinds of scientists, various kinds of revolutionary fighters and politicians, and religious leaders. Their personalities are largely shaped by their professions and/or scientific disciplines. However all the characters are well written and through their actions, thoughts, and expressed values the reader sees multiple dimensions of their passions, flaws, and personalities.
The characters and the story are easy to fall in love with but challenging to read. The liberal arts academic who dreaded science class might want to approach this book with caution. However, if you pick up Green Mars and the Mars Trilogy, no matter what you scientific inclination is, you will probably be entertained and definitely be educated.
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5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Amazing
Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2021
An amazing book I remember from my childhood. Much of it went over my head (I don't remember how old I was, but I might very well have been in middle school) but I remember being enthralled. No matter how much I didn't get at that age, I still put Kim Stanley Robinson on... See more
An amazing book I remember from my childhood. Much of it went over my head (I don't remember how old I was, but I might very well have been in middle school) but I remember being enthralled. No matter how much I didn't get at that age, I still put Kim Stanley Robinson on my list of Authors I Would Definitely Enjoy Reading. I would say this about the whole Mars trilogy. I remember the cover of my copy of Red Mars being so terribly abused and damaged by use. The latter two books remained in better repair, but I definitely remember reading them, though my memory is quite dim and it's possible I may have skipped a few sections. But this one, I think, helped me to understand the character of Ann Clayborn, who in turn helped me to understand environmentalism for the first time. I might or might not have believed that something's value came from its practical usefulness, but I didn't have the certain knowledge that I developed that something can be valuable for its own sake, that it should be preserved even in the face of massive practical difficulties that arise, simply because it exists, that it is beautiful and astonishing and strange. This in spite of the fact that I had been a Reader since elementary school, that my most treasured hours were always spent with something beautiful and astonishing and strange. But no one encapsulates that Truth in the same way as Ann Clayborn. As I reread these books now--just finished Green Mars, about to start Blue Mars--it occurs to me that this series of books might have very well made me a better person
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4.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Not just Science Fiction!
Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2021
Kim Stanley Robinson is not just a great story teller but an absolute academic geek. The Mars trilogy peaks in this volume where the crises of earth overpopulation clash with the new population begins developing from the first 100 on Mars into a complex diversity of techno... See more
Kim Stanley Robinson is not just a great story teller but an absolute academic geek. The Mars trilogy peaks in this volume where the crises of earth overpopulation clash with the new population begins developing from the first 100 on Mars into a complex diversity of techno cultures. Mars is evolving out of its previous ice age and the air is getting richer with oxygen, yes, but the real story here is not terra-forming but culture and government forming. With his usual penchant for mixing current earth ecological/governmental problems and solutions more readable, Robinson also attacks perhaps the greatest problem on earth by using his Mars metaphor, our inability to listen and understand each other, our polarization on earth becomes multiplied by the diversity of Mars. A great thinkers tomb and a riveting read for anybody pondering why the world cannot collaborate.
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3.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Perhaps A Hundred Pages Too Long
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2016
The second book of Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy starts with great promise - some of the same characters, some interesting new characters, some old problems, some interesting new problems - and the plot begins developing nicely. But somewhere along the way the book... See more
The second book of Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy starts with great promise - some of the same characters, some interesting new characters, some old problems, some interesting new problems - and the plot begins developing nicely. But somewhere along the way the book slows waaaaaay down and I found it difficult to keep my focus. Many of the book's discussions are intricate and interesting: philosophies of engineering an ecosphere, adapting to life on Mars, social structures of new cities, attitudinal differences among generations, and the like. But regrettably, some of those discussions drag on and on and on and become tedious and distracting. I plowed through to the end, but it was plowing indeed and I may have been happier just to finish than I was with the novel's resolution.
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5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
A science fiction masterpeiece with real-world relevance
Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2016
This is the second book in the Mars trilogy, which should be read as one book -- Red, Green, Blue. Robinson has a rare combination of gifts: a gear-head's technical savvy, a scientist's speculative sophistication ... the natural feel for narrative of a born story-teller,... See more
This is the second book in the Mars trilogy, which should be read as one book -- Red, Green, Blue. Robinson has a rare combination of gifts: a gear-head's technical savvy, a scientist's speculative sophistication ... the natural feel for narrative of a born story-teller, and the style of a poet. It's a powerful array and makes for a compulsively readable, intellectually stimulating and often quite moving epic -- an intimate epic, the best kind. His characters, especially the "first 100", wind up living extended lives through genetic manipulation and so experience first hand the tremendous changes that transform their adopted planet. The struggles between those who wish to leave Mars as it is and those who want to remake it as an alternate Earth, between "metanational" corporations who want to pilfer Mars for its natural resources, governments who want to use immigration there as a safety valve for their own over-population problems cast a prescient reflection on the real difficulties currently afflicting our own planet. These books, first published in the 1990s, have long been known as masterpieces of science-fiction -- but they deserve a mainstream readership as well. Peerless. Read them now, so you can gripe about the upcoming TV version!
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5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Brilliant
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2023
This second installation is fantastic. I'm not sure why other reviews complain about the descriptions of Mars. Uh, that is what the book is about. If you don't want to hear about the topography of the planet maybe this isn't the book for you. I was concerned the... See more
This second installation is fantastic. I'm not sure why other reviews complain about the descriptions of Mars. Uh, that is what the book is about. If you don't want to hear about the topography of the planet maybe this isn't the book for you.
I was concerned the politics might bog down the story. But its just the opposite. Its very exciting. Ready to go Blue now.
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Top reviews from other countries

Krishna
4.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Slow.paced good scifi
Reviewed in India on December 20, 2023
I finished this only because I am a cpmpletist. Hard, realistic scifi. Not much action. Lots not politics and sociology. Good characters.
I finished this only because I am a cpmpletist.

Hard, realistic scifi. Not much action. Lots not politics and sociology. Good characters.

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Gabriel Sosa Morfín
5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Excelente trilogía para amantes de la ciencia ficción.
Reviewed in Mexico on April 3, 2020
Excelente trilogía. Para fans de la ciencia ficción tirando más a la ciencia.
Excelente trilogía. Para fans de la ciencia ficción tirando más a la ciencia.

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WildHoney
5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Worth Reading!
Reviewed in Canada on March 11, 2019
I have yet to finish reading but so far so good. I purchased both Green and Blue Mars after having read Red Mars for the second time. I love these novels!
I have yet to finish reading but so far so good. I purchased both Green and Blue Mars after having read Red Mars for the second time. I love these novels!

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Paolo Cavallo
5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Un libro di roccia e di vento
Reviewed in Italy on December 24, 2016
La Mars Trilogy è un grande libro. Un libro sulla scienza e sulla politica e sull'idea che la passione senza ego che anima entrambe basti a rendere la vita degna di essere vissuta. Anzi, bastino a riempire una lunghissima vita: una vita lenta e violenta come il tempo...See more
La Mars Trilogy è un grande libro. Un libro sulla scienza e sulla politica e sull'idea che la passione senza ego che anima entrambe basti a rendere la vita degna di essere vissuta. Anzi, bastino a riempire una lunghissima vita: una vita lenta e violenta come il tempo profondo della geologia che è il primo protagonista di questo libro di roccia e di vento. Non servono meno di duemila pagine, con le loro lentezze e le loro ripetizioni, a trasportare il lettore su Marte e a convincerlo alla fine di avere vissuto su Marte anche lui, uno dei Primi Cento, capace di trasformare un mondo e di esserne trasformato.
La Mars Trilogy è un grande libro. Un libro sulla scienza e sulla politica e sull'idea che la passione senza ego che anima entrambe basti a rendere la vita degna di essere vissuta. Anzi, bastino a riempire una lunghissima vita: una vita lenta e violenta come il tempo profondo della geologia che è il primo protagonista di questo libro di roccia e di vento. Non servono meno di duemila pagine, con le loro lentezze e le loro ripetizioni, a trasportare il lettore su Marte e a convincerlo alla fine di avere vissuto su Marte anche lui, uno dei Primi Cento, capace di trasformare un mondo e di esserne trasformato.

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Siehnel, Gary
5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
not really green
Reviewed in Germany on March 4, 2016
although the first hundred did't really manage to make mars green they did manage to mess things up with a glorious, transparent and sad human fashion...kind of reminds one of a canticle for liebowitz...humans striving to finally "get it right"...forgetting than...See more
although the first hundred did't really manage to make mars green they did manage to mess things up with a glorious, transparent and sad human fashion...kind of reminds one of a canticle for liebowitz...humans striving to finally "get it right"...forgetting than humans have never ever really "gotten it right"....the details and truly authentic scientific details are intensely learned....one thing is for sure that science left to do its thing would have had a small chance...but then again even under the scientist there that normal human trait striving for a sub dynamic tension junkies...singularity is just a big laugh in the face of all attempts made...the basic theme implying that no group of homo sapien sapiens can ever achieve a comfortable kind of democracy...what a wonder...we've never made on earth either...instinct always overrides intelligence, even at the highest levels...and our instinct drives to a solitary singularity and isolation swamped up in being accurate but never precise...nice try but no cigar!!!
although the first hundred did't really manage to make mars green they did manage to mess things up with a glorious, transparent and sad human
fashion...kind of reminds one of a canticle for liebowitz...humans striving to finally "get it right"...forgetting than humans have never ever really "gotten it right"....the details and truly authentic scientific details are intensely learned....one thing is for sure that science left to do its thing would have had a small chance...but then again even under the scientist there that normal human trait striving for a sub dynamic tension junkies...singularity is just a big laugh in the face of all attempts made...the basic theme implying that no group of homo sapien sapiens can ever achieve a comfortable kind of democracy...what a wonder...we've never made on earth either...instinct always overrides intelligence, even at the highest levels...and our instinct drives to a solitary singularity and isolation swamped up in being accurate but never precise...nice try but no cigar!!!

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