Blue Mars
Robinson, Kim Stanley
|
List Price:
$8.99 or 10,790₩
Our Price:
$8.99 or 10,790₩
Total delivery time:
within 2 business days Available at our Itaewon store
|
Format:
Mass Market Paperbound, 784pp.
Date of publication:
Jun 02 1997
ISBN-13:
9780553573350
Dimensions:
17.55
cm. (length) X
10.67
cm. (width) X
3.38
cm. (thickness)
Weight:
363
grams
This book was a nominee, honoree, or winner of:
Hugo Award, Locus Awards
Customers also bought
Robinson, Kim Stanley
Price: $7.99 or 9,590₩
|
Robinson, Kim Stanley
Price: $7.99 or 9,590₩
|
Kenner, Hugh
Price: $45.44 or 54,530₩
|
10% off!
Peake, Mervyn
List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $26.95 or 32,340₩
You save: $3.00 (10%)
|
Bronson, Po
Price: $13.95 or 16,740₩
|
Iyer, Pico
Price: $14.70 or 17,640₩
|
10% off!
Iyer, Pico
List Price: $15.00
Our Price: $13.50 or 16,200₩
You save: $1.50 (10%)
|
Stephenson, Neal
Price: $16.99 or 20,390₩
|
Stephenson, Neal
Price: $10.99 or 13,190₩
|
10% off!
Wilson, Robert Charles
List Price: $7.99
Our Price: $7.19 or 8,630₩
You save: $0.80 (10%)
|
Chomsky, Noam
Price: $17.00 or 20,400₩
|
Rowling, J. K.
List Price: $29.99
Our Price: $25.49 or 30,590₩
You save: $4.50 (15%)
|
‹
›
Kim Stanley Robinson is a winner of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Awards. He is the author of eleven previous books, including the bestselling Mars trilogy and the critically acclaimed
Fifty Degrees Below, Forty Signs of Rain, The Years of Rice and Salt, and
Antarctica–for which he was sent to the Antarctic by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of their Antarctic Artists and Writers’ Program. He lives in Davis, California
[Edit review]
[Delete review]
The red planet is red no longer, as Mars has become a perfectly inhabitable world. But while Mars flourishes, Earth is threatened by overpopulation and ecological disaster. Soon people look to Mars as a refuge, initiating a possible interplanetary conflict, as well as political strife between the Reds, who wish to preserve the planet in its desert state, and the Green "terraformers". The ultimate fate of Earth, as well as the possibility of new explorations into the solar system, stand in the balance.
[Edit review]
[Delete review]
At a certain moment before dawn the sky always glowed the same bands of pink as in the beginning, pale and clear in the east, rich and starry in the west. Ann watched for this moment as her companions drove them west, toward a mass of black land rearing into the sky--the Tharsis Bulge, punctuated by the broad cone of Pavonis Mons. As they rolled uphill from Noctis Labyrinthus they rose above most of the new atmosphere; the air pressure at the foot of Pavonis was only 180 millibars, and then as they drove up the eastern flank of the great shield volcano it dropped under 100 millibars, and continued to fall. Slowly they ascended above all visible foliage, crunching over dirty patches of wind-carved snow; then they ascended above even the snow, until there was nothing but rock, and the ceaseless thin cold winds of the jet stream. The bare land looked just as it had in the prehuman years, as if they were driving back up into the past. It... [
More...]
[Edit review]
[Delete review]