Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Sands of Mars
The Sands of Mars | Arthur C. Clarke
3 posts | 4 read | 1 to read
In Clarke’s first published full-length science fiction novel, renowned science fiction writer Martin Gibson joins the spaceship Ares, the world’s first interplanetary ship for passenger travel, on its maiden voyage to Mars. His mission: to report back to the home planet about the new Mars colony and the progress it has been making. First published in 1951, before the achievement of space flight, Clarke addresses hard physical and scientific issues with aplomb—and the best scientific understanding of the times. Included are the challenges of differing air pressures, lack of oxygen, food provisions, severe weather patterns, construction on Mars, and methods of local travel—both on the surface and to the planet’s two moons.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
blurb
TheBookgeekFrau
The Sands of Mars | Arthur C. Clarke
post image
Eggs Love this old book! (35 cents😳) 1y
TheBookgeekFrau @Eggs @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Right?!!! Cracks me up every time I see the price 🤣 (edited) 1y
33 likes3 comments
review
swynn
The Sands of Mars | Arthur C. Clarke
post image
Mehso-so

A science fiction author travels to a Martian space colony for research, and finds the place grows on him. It's dry, episodic, and travelogue-y, and the author is much more interested in building a functional space colony on Mars than he is in story or character. OTOH his enthusiasm for hard-science world-building is infectious. (Also charmingly dated.) It won't rank among my favorites, but I'm glad I finally got around to it.

#doublespin

RamsFan1963 What is your favorite Clarke novel? I'd say mine is A Fall of Moondust or The Fountains of Paradise. 5y
swynn @RamsFan1963 I'm embarrassed to say I've read very few, and the two you mention aren't among them. But I do love Rendezvous with Rama. 5y
RamsFan1963 @swynn I haven't read Rendezvous with Rama, but I do have it on my TBR shelves. I think the only Clarke book I haven't enjoyed, and goodness knows I haven't read them all, is his most famous book, Childhood's End. 5y
24 likes3 comments
blurb
swynn
The Sands of Mars | Arthur C. Clarke
post image

My #bookspin and #doublespin books. For y'all old enough to remember Ace Doubles and wondering what's on the other side of "I Want the Stars": it's Kenneth Bulmer's "Demons' World"