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Venus

A book by Ben Bova

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Excellent!

  • Apr 30, 2004
  • by
Rating:
+5
Bova is a master storyteller about planetary exploration! In this book Van Humphries is given a challenge by his rich father. The challenge is to go to Venus and recover the body of his dead brother who crashed during an earlier attempt to explore the planet. The prize is 10 billion dollars.

Van, a type of playboy who is used to the fast pampered life-style of the wealthy is in danger of being cut off from his source of income so his father's prize is enough incentive to risk his life to maintain the type of life he is accustomed to or have to go get a job!

Van is an anemic, who must have two injections a day or die. He is in a race to get to the deadly planet before a renegade asteriod minor (Fuchs) can get there and beat him to the prize. Venus turns out to be full of surprises and unthought of dangers. Van's ship is destroyed and he is rescued by Fuchs and put at his mercy. Additionally, Van's father had ruined Fuchs' life so Fuchs has a score to settle.

The tension mounts as Van, deprived of his injections faces death from his disease, a mutinous crew, and a crazed Fuchs. Additionally, the terrors of Venus also loom.

Bova does an excellent job presenting a science ficion thriller and presents a great deal of detail about Venus.

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September 23, 2010
Great summary!
 
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More Venus reviews
review by . September 23, 2010
Martin Humphries, a fabulously wealthy industrialist living on a lunar colony, passionately despises his second son, Van. Cruelly labeling him as "the runt" and bullying him relentlessly as a directionless, untalented weakling, Humphries blames Van for the death of his wife during Van's birth and, in fact, resents him for even being alive. Humphries' beloved eldest son, Alex, who Van also loved dearly, lost his life in the first manned exploration of the surface of Venus. When …
review by . July 05, 2003
Ben Bova's "Venus" is a fairly good story. I was a little turned off at first because it is written in first person, which I am not a big fan of and hadn't read a first person novel in a really long time. However, about halfway through the book, I realized the importance of the first person point of few when other strong characters were introduced.This is less a science fiction story and more a character journey in a scientific world. If you are looking for hard core scientific observations and …
review by . September 18, 2001
. . .with this shallow, unbelievable novel.Ben Bova has, over the years, provided the Science Fiction reader with solid "hard-science" fiction novels, set in the near future, exploring technological ideas which are reasonable. Although character development has never been his strong suit, this has not, to my mind, been a significant detraction.Until now.In this novel, Bova's reliance on science is far weaker than in his novels dealing with Mars or the Moon -- and bases his plot around a totally …
review by . December 13, 2001
Venus is in many ways the ideal woman of literature, beautiful, but improperly approached, deadly. Named after the mythological goddess of beauty, it is the closest planet to Earth and for years, considered the most Earthlike. Hovering like a jewel in the sky, it can sometimes be so bright that it casts a shadow. However, true to the literary femme fatale, the beauty is in appearance only. With acid in the atmosphere, hellish heat and tremendous atmospheric pressure, it is quite likely the driest …
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I first got on this blog to discuss my first passion which is books. Since I have gotten on I find that books are only a piece of this blog and I can discuss just about anything that comes to mind. It … more
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Wiki

Ben Bova picked his villains well for this fast-paced, popcorn-and-Milk- Duds matinee: Topping the playbill is our sister planet, Venus itself, which Bova matter-of-factly describes as "the most hellish place in the solar system." Sci-fi authors (Bova included) have all but colonized Mars by now, but few have boldly gone to the aluminum-melting, sulfuric-acid-soaked surface of the Morning Star. Venus proves a mighty, unthinking antagonist indeed--frustrating the efforts of sickly but likable rich kid Van Humphries to land there and recover the remains of his older brother Alex, who died two years earlier on another ill-fated mission.

Van gets pushed back and forth between the book's two lesser villains--his mean old cuss of a father, Martin Humphries, who's posted the $10 billion Venus Prize to the first person to return Alex's body, and Lars Fuchs, a belligerent asteroid miner and Martin's arch-nemesis, who's also decided to make a go at the purse.

Characterizations ride coach on this high-adventure flight, but remember that we're talking about Ben Bova here. It's hard to dispute the master's choices as you're following Van's well-researched, thrills-and-chills descent through Venus's pressure-cooker atmosphere. With solid science, a palatable environmental message (how could you resist commenting on greenhouse gases in a book like this?), and an inspiring character arc for unlikely hero Van, Venus delivers guilt-free, man-against-nature SF in a tight, page-turning package. ...

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Details

ISBN-10: 0812579402
ISBN-13: 978-0812579406
Author: Ben Bova
Genre: Science Fiction & Fantasy
Publisher: Tor Science Fiction
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