Book 3 of Queen of Angels
Language: English
2 of 1994 Locus Award for Best SF Novel 2-award-winner Fiction General High Tech Library - Science Fiction and Fantasy Mars Mars (Planet) Nanotechnology Nebula Award Winner Novel Science Fiction Space colonies Win of 1994 SF Chronicle Award for Novel Win of 1995 Nebula Award for Novel _isfdb hugo award for best novel finalist nebula award for best novel finalist nebula award for best novel winner
Publisher: Tor
Published: Nov 2, 1993
Description:
Amazon.com Review
In this 1995
From Publishers Weekly
Nebula Award winner Bear has long been known for novels of stunning scientific extrapolation and high literary quality from his early novel Blood Music to his more recent Queen of Angels . This new novel of Mars is his finest yet. Bear follows the unlikely career of Casseia Majumdar of the Majumdar Binding Multiple (a sort of cross between an extended family and a corporation) as she goes from lukewarm student activist to president of the fledgling Federal Republic of Mars. Beginning as a coming-of-age story, with Casseia encountering corruption as well as courage and determination in a student uprising, the narrative then becomes a fine, taut and realistic political novel, as Casseia travels to Earth as part of an ambassadorial retinue, and later serves as second in leader Ti Sandra's push for Martian unification. As conflict heats up between upstart Mars and Mother Earth, Bear introduces a wildly intriguing hard-science idea, and the novel spins into a tense science fiction thriller. Bear offers a fast-moving plot; realistic, appealing characters; a vividly imagined future Earth awash in "tailored microbes," nanotechnology and dirty dealing; and the most believable evocation of the workings of politics and science in any recent science fiction novel. It all adds up to a blowout of a book, perhaps the best of the recent Mars novels, and certainly one of the best sf novels of the year.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.