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Rock Rats (Asteroid Wars)
 
 
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Rock Rats (Asteroid Wars) [Audiobook] [Audio CD]

Ben Bova , Ira Claffey , Amanda Karr
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: MacMillan Audio; Unabridged edition (Feb 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1593974922
  • ISBN-13: 978-1593974923
  • Product Dimensions: 14.5 x 12.7 x 3.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,438,601 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Ben Bova
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

In The Rock Rats, Ben Bova continues the melodramatic saga that began in The Precipice, with a gold rush to exploit mineral (and other) resources of that vast new frontier the asteroid belt.

Independent "rock rat" prospectors trying to get rich out there face not only the bleak hazards of space but ruthless claim-jumping and piracy from hissable bad guy Martin Humphries. Though exposed for murderous sabotage in book 1, this wicked industrialist and his giant corporation Humphries Space Systems remain major players. Soon HSS minions bring murder and arson to the Ceres asteroid base.

Also, with the enjoyable implausibility of a TV soap, Humphries is emotionally involved. Though consoling himself with mistresses he has the hots for lovely Amanda Cunningham, currently married to leading rock rat Lars Fuchs, who's determined to track down HSS's sadistic hitman Harbin... Man the lasers! Space-pirate ahoy!

Meanwhile on an Earth ravaged by the greenhouse effect and fundamentalist government, diplomatic overtures to the now independent Moon have a positively Ruritanian flavour:

Jatar Pahang was not only the world's most popular video star, she was also the mistress of Xu Xianqing, chairman of the world government's inner council, and his secret envoy to Stavenger and the government of Selene.

It adds up to pleasantly unlikely and over-the-top adventure, with Humphries and Harbin repeatedly and literally getting away with murder, while Fuchs isn't so lucky when innocent rock rats die in a revenge strike by his own privateer ship. The resulting cliff-hanger finale is a sure-fire hook for further mayhem amid the asteroids in book three.--David Langford --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

'I believe that the science fiction author who will have the greatest effect on the world is Ben Bova' Ray Bradbury 2 'A splendid book.. of his many books, Mars must be the most important.' Arthur C. Clarke on MARS 3 'Extraordinary... this kind of story is the reason science fiction exists in the first place.' Orson Scott Card on MARS 4 'One of sci-fi's great contemporary writers...Ben Bova writes good, authentic science' Huddersfield Daily Examiner 5 Return to Mars is an entertaining read, a good example of the bread and butter of the genre Vector on RETURN TO MARS 6 'An epic space novel by an award-winning SF scribe' Books Magazine --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I have read the Moonbase series and followed the saga as man moved further into the Solar system (according to the author). This is an excellent continuation of the story. It is fast paced, covers fantastic and believable detail for technology 'achievements' and human emotions. The story is, as usual, entirely gripping and attention seeking. Pick it up and you can't put ut down. I now have a void in that it finishes, as ever, with the reader eargerly awaiting the next part of the story....
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Format:Kindle Edition
My enjoyment of this book The Rock Rats: The Asteroid Wars II was spoilt by the Kindle edition being formatted / transcribed very badly.

Many words where "hyphen-ated" incorrectly, where there should not have been a hyphen.

Clearly there was no / inadequate proof reading of the Kindle edition in this instance and a paper copy would not have reached publication with these errors.

I returned my copy for a refund as, in its current form it is not for for purpose. I hope the publisher corrects this.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  24 reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Slightly better than The Precipice 19 Oct 2003
By Gary Riley - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The second book of The Asteroid Wars is slightly better than the first, primarily because there's more action, but it suffers from the same flaw as the first, namely characters that just aren't that interesting. I'd put Bova in the same general class as Tom Clancy: good when writing about hardware, but unable to write characters with any real depth. If you want to read a good book by Bova, start with Jupiter or Venus which focus much more on science and hardware than this book.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Rabble In Arms 27 Aug 2006
By Arthur W. Jordin - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The Rock Rats (2002) is the second SF novel in the Asteroid Wars series, following The Precipice. In the previous volume, Kris Cardenas almost commits suicide over her sabotage of the Starpower 1, but decides to stay alive to ensure that Martin Humphries is convicted for his crimes.

On the Starpower 1, the crew abandon ship temporarily to burrow into the surface of Asteroid 32-114, a porous body like a huge sand pile, but Dan Randolph still receives a fatal dose of radiation. Before he dies, Randolph leaves all his possessions to Pancho Lane, including a huge block of Astro Manufacturing. After returning to Selene, Pancho is voted onto the board of directors of Astro, despite Humphries's opposition.

In this novel, Humphries's lawyers tie up Selene's courts on the exile order, but the courts still divest him of all his shares in Astro Manufacturing and Starpower. He crashes the wedding reception for Amanda Cunningham and Lar Fuchs and presents them with a wedding present: the refurbished Starpower 1. While he hopes that Lars will go to the Belt and leave Amanda behind, the couple foil Humphries by leaving together.

The more Amanda avoids Humphries's attempts to get her into bed, the more he is infatuated with her. His latest ploy is a trading and maintenance center on Ceres, the largest asteroid. Amanda convinces Lars and Pancho to open another trading company, Helvetia Inc., in competition with Humphries Space Systems, with Astro providing the goods at low cost. They now have a larger clientele than HSS.

Humphries's aide suggests a carrot and stick approach to the problem. After consulting with his security chief, Humphries agrees to applying violence to Helvetia customers. A month later, rock rats start dying.

First three ships disappear and later the HSS files claim on asteroids that they have discovered. Then there is a fire in the Helvetia warehouse. When HSS men murder the chief engineer on the habitat project, the body is taken to Kris Cardenas, who determines the cause of death and even the name of the murderer.

Lars tracks down the murderer, goads him into attacking him with the murder weapon, and then kills him thoroughly. Under Lars's insistence, a court is formed to try him for murder. Of course, the court finds him innocent, but a precedence is set for the formation of a government in the Belt.

This novel relates the beginning moves in the Asteroid Wars. HSS has attacked first and the rock rats are far behind. Yet this anarchy of individuals is finally starting to think of the social implications of an HSS monopoly and is appalled at the idea.

Recommended for Bova fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of corporate battles, social conflict and personal frustrations.

-Arthur W. Jordin
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Classic tragedy set in outer space 30 Jun 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
This novel is excellent, period. Bova develops a future where the earth's resources have been depleted, and its only hope lies in the mineral rich asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The ores in the Belt are worth countless trillions of dollars, and struggle develops between an industrial tycoon, Martin Humphries, and the unofficial leader of independent asteroid prospectors, Lars Fuchs. Humphries is a cold-blooded, hyper-ambitious industrialist that amkes JR Ewing look like a saint. Fuchs is genuinely concerned about "the little man," but is a slave to his own volcanic temper and violent urges. The two men are the centers around which the war for control of the asteroid belt revolves.

Warning: this book does not end happy. Hence the word "tragedy" in the title of my review. Fuchs own moral and personal failings prove his undoing; yet Humphries does not truly win either. To say more would ruin the book. Just remember that this book is a tragedy, in the classic sense of the word. Think "Moby Dick" as an example of what I mean.

The charge that Bova does not develop the characters enough is superfluous; these same characters have appeared in other books by him and have been fully developed in those, so to do so again in this book would be repetitive and unfair to his loyal readers. It is number two in a trilogy, so the final ending may be happier than the one in this book. Nonetheless, for those who can stand its sober conclusion, this book by itself is an excellent read. It is fast paced, technically accurate, and emphasizes action strongly. All in all a great way to spend a few hours.

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