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Red Thunder (A Thunder and Lightning Novel) Mass Market Paperback – April 27, 2004
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- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAce
- Publication dateApril 27, 2004
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions4.2 x 1.1 x 6.7 inches
- ISBN-100441011624
- ISBN-13978-0441011629
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Superior science fiction."—Philadelphia Inquirer
"The heart-pounding space race is on! [A] riveting SF thriller...with hilarious, well-drawn characters, extraordinary situations presented plausibly, plus exciting action and adventure."—Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Ace (April 27, 2004)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0441011624
- ISBN-13 : 978-0441011629
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 7 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.2 x 1.1 x 6.7 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,861,872 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,903 in Technothrillers (Books)
- #5,549 in Hard Science Fiction (Books)
- #27,246 in Science Fiction Adventures
- Customer Reviews:
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Just how do you build a spaceship in your back yard (or even a rented warehouse)? As a starting point, it greatly helps if you have a power plant that can deliver effectively unlimited power, the invention of Jubal, Travis Broussard's highly eccentric cousin. Travis, as an alcoholic cashiered astronaut, provides both some of the necessary capital and the experience level to make such a project a possible reality. For labor, four `kids' (they're 20+ years old) who are motivated and highly intelligent, who already have some skill sets that are quite relevant to the task are quite willing to learn more. Building the ship occupies a good two thirds of the book, and some of the details of how it's done in a hurry-up, make it work (while really testing for safety) fashion make for fascinating reading. The actual flight of the Red Thunder, while still interesting, is not quite so fascinating, and the space rescue that the crew performs on an American attempt to reach Mars smacks a little bit of melodrama, but it had me turning pages till two in the morning.
The power plant device, the `Squeezer', is highly improbable, and violates quite a few principles of physics (as known today), but it is the basic element that both allows the space ship to become a reality, and due to its inherent power, drives the reasoning behind building the ship as a private enterprise, as such power, in the wrong hands, could become a nightmare. This helps drive one of the thematic messages of this book, an almost paranoid anti-government (of any stripe) stance, a reflection on the reality that all humans are not inherently good, kind, or peaceful. Offsetting this message are some others: people really can and often do help one another, people do better when they have a definite goal to work towards, your family is a major influence in your formation, but is not the only or final determiner of just what type of person you become.
Varley pays some definite homage to Heinlein here, with a plot line that is very much a re-working of Heinlein's Rocket Ship Galileo (Heinlein's first and probably his weakest juvenile), updated to today's world (and so becoming far more believable). There are more references to Heinlein in the character's names (Manny Garcia, Jubal) and John D. MacDonald (Travis, McGee and the Florida setting). This book is not technically a juvenile, but it has that same feel, and is readable by almost anyone over the age of fourteen or so (there are some references to sex and some portrayed family relationships that are probably not appropriate for younger readers).
The characters are well fleshed out, and the portrayed interpersonal relationships ring with veracity. It's easy to get very caught up in Manny's (the first-person narrator) life, his relationships with his mother, his girlfriend Kelly, his best friend Dak. A very fast and highly entertaining read, one that will forcibly remind you of just what a pleasure reading can be.
--- Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)
Now, in all fairness, Varley doesn’t tell this story for laughs, at least most of the time. However, this is a tale about four young people who are barely out of their teens. These four young adventurers team up with a disgraced former astronaut who is typically seen wedded to a whisky bottle and his Cajun cousin, a Bible-thumping scientific genius who is widely considered retarded. I told you this was wacky science fiction, remember?
Although the technology at the heart of this tale is improbable beyond the known limits of human science, he treats it in a serious fashion. When the time comes to build a spaceship that will use the fanciful Broussard Drive to propel the Red Thunder to Mars in three-and-a-half days, Varley meticulously describes in an entirely realistic fashion all that the unlikely crew would have to do to make it serviceable. And, this being science fiction (and wacky to boot), you know—you just know—they’ll get there. But that happens long before the end of the story, and there’s lots more fun to follow.
About the author
John Varley (1947-) has been writing science fiction since 1974. He has published more than a dozen novels, which have gained him nominations for most of the major awards in the field. He is best known for the Gaea Trilogy (Titan, Wizard, and Demon). Red Thunder is the first of a series of four novels.
It's not bad. The characters are interesting enough, especially the real adults, but the four young people that are at the center of the story feel a bit shallow and not real. While there is always the possibility (and hope) of a new and cheap power source, the idea of being able to build a home made rocket in the short time they have, and produce something usable, does not feel realistic and the idea that it could be kept secret among all of the people in the plot just seems silly.
Still, if you can suspend your belief the book it is OK. No surprises here, no plot twists and no real mystery, but not much more to the story than the main plot.
Top reviews from other countries
Good cast of characters. Good storyline.
Interesting author.
Look forward to more of these books.




