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The Fifth Man: Oxygen Series, Book 2 (Unabridged)
 
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The Fifth Man: Oxygen Series, Book 2 (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by John B. Olson (Author), Randall Ingermanson (Author), Norman Dietz (Narrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 15 hours and 53 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Recorded Books
  • Audible Release Date: 27 July 2009
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ7IC2
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

From the acclaimed, Christy Award-winning writing team of John B. Olson and Randall Ingermanson comes this sequel to Oxygen.

On the first manned mission to Mars, astronauts Valkerie Jansen and Bob Kaganovski may have discovered evidence of past life on the red planet. But under constant scrutiny from NASA, and with the media watching their every move, their relationship becomes strained.

©2002 John B. Olson and Randall Ingermanson; (P)2003 Recorded Books, LLC

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Mars, 2015. The discovery of past life on Mars, by astronaut Valkerie Jansen, sends earth’s media into a frenzy. Meanwhile, the action on the surface of the red planet hots up. The situation gets tense, and relationships become strained. Valkerie thinks she saw ‘something’ out there, and as mysterious things start to happen, the hunt for the elusive ‘fifth man’ begins. Who or what is trying to stop them from getting home safely?

In this stunning sequel to Oxygen – the Christy Award winning novel about a mission to Mars - Olson and Ingermanson outdo themselves, producing a superb page-turner. With each new chapter, the plot thickens, often introducing surprising new twists.

The action is swift, jumping from Mars’ dusty surface to Mission Control in Houston and back again, while questions of faith, and some good old romance, combine with suspense to make this a book that’s hard to put down.

Olson and Ingermanson’s latest offering, The Fifth Man, is a great read, a futuristic novel with a scientific undertone.

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Amazon.com:  18 reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Is there life on Mars....or in this book? 18 Feb 2007
By Kevin Lucia - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
In the sequel to Oxygen, winner of the 2002 Christy Award, the mission to Mars continues as astronauts Valkerie Jansen, Bob Kaganovski, Alexis Ohata, and Kennedy Hampton search the arid, lifeless desert terrain of Mars for any signs of life, even the most microscopic. They've survived great obstacles to reach this point - an early flight explosion on their trip to Mars, the discovery of a potentially life-threatening bio-organism shortly after the accident, and personal difficulties in their relationships - but it all seemingly pays off as Valkerie discovers a microscopic organism buried in a deep tunnel protected from the sun's harsh cosmic rays. Despite her uncertainty about how to deal with Bob's awkward marriage proposal - especially considering their claustrophobic conditions - she's elated at the prospect of doing what so many have dreamed and theorized about: discovering life on Mars.

However, trouble is brewing under the surface. While Commander Kennedy Hampton shows increasingly aggressive, confrontational behavior towards the rest of the crew, Bob Kaganovski feels watched out of the corner of his eyes. He's gone through all the psychological studies and training, and is well aware of the potential stresses of being alone with only three other people on a desolate planet - but still, he feels certain that something is out there, watching their every move. Coupled with the pang of unrequited love, the foundations for an explosive decompression are laid. When Valkerie and Kennedy fall ill with an unexplained sickness and start hallucinating sounds and an other presence, a match is held very close to burning flame.

Meanwhile, things are unraveling at NASA in Houston. As top flight officials face mounting pressure over whether or not they should bring back their sick astronauts and risk "back-contamination" - contaminating Earth with a potentially extraterrestrial bacteria - it becomes clear someone at Mission Control can't be trusted. Whether it's a Russian spy or one of their own gone bad, a hacker is on the loose, determined to do everything in their power to ruin the mission and strand their astronauts on Mars forever.

Commander Kennedy goes insane and attacks Valkerie and Bob; someone steals the Rover and sabotages vital equipment and supplies, and strange things go "bump in the night". Have they all gone mad with a Martian disease...or is there a "fifth man" among them?

This is a novel I REALLY wanted to love; in fact, I did for most of the story. Olsen and Ingermanson lay down a narrative that's tense and suspenseful, the science is plausible and believable, and there are a lot of Red Planet (Val Kilmer) and Mission to Mars (Gary Sinese) vibes that really makes the reader wonder: is a Christian science fiction novel going to go where no Christian science fiction novel has gone before, (pun intended), and declare life on other planets?

**SPOILER ALERT** Alas, the spookie heebie jeebies are explained away, making this once again a "safe" Christian science fiction novel that colors within the lines. The skill to tell an engaging story is here, and while many won't blink twice at the novel's ending, I'm sure more than a few will feel a little disappointment upon discovering the "fifth man" isn't who/what we were hoping.

This is an enjoyable, suspenseful novel for the most part, but if you were hoping for boundary-pushing science fiction that'll pose interesting questions concerning theology and life on other planets like Rendezvous With Rama, and Rama II by Arthur C. Clarke, this isn't it, despite skillful writing and attention to detail.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
great Christian science fiction thriller 28 Nov 2003
By Harriet Klausner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The crew has reached its destination Mars after a harrowing near death space trip from earth (see OXYGEN). Now a new survival test begins with the crew trying to live on a planet that makes Antarctica seem like a sauna and no rescue flight possible. Nothing should be able to survive in this frozen inhabitant.

The four member crew struggles with the harshness of life while trying to meet NASA's detailed expectations in which every nanosecond is booked. Meanwhile, deeply religious microbial ecologist Dr. Valkerie Jansen finds proof that life once existed on the angry red planet, but swears she has also seen a "fifth man" sabotaging their mission. No one else has seen this ET so Commander Dr. Bob Kaganovski worries that she is cracking up under the strain. Illness has hit the team too in what seems like a War of the Worlds reversal. Martian madness grips the crew, but is that why Bob cannot stop looking at Valkerie while they wonder if infected, can they go home?

The second book in John B. Olson, and Randall Ingermanson marvelous Martian mission, THE FIFTH MAN, is a great Christian science fiction thriller that enables the audience to feel they are living on the frozen tundra along with the crew. The exhilarating story line hooks the reader on several levels including the obvious survival adventure and whether THE FIFTH MAN exists or is imagined and if the latter who is sabotaging their chances of enduring the severity. Fans will wonder if bacteria could live on this ice cold orb while applauding the two authors for once again proving that science and religion are compatible.

Harriet Klausner

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Well-Researched and Crafted Christian Science Fiction 20 Aug 2007
By Kyle Pratt - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Fifth Man takes up the story where the first novel, Oxygen, left us--on the surface of Mars. Both novels would be considered hard science fiction in that everything in the stories is within the realm of science and technology.

This novel, published in 2002, is a sequel to Oxygen. Both are well-researched and crafted, near future, Christian science fiction novel. Oxygen begins in the year 2014 just before the first mission to Mars. Microbial ecologist Valkerie Jansen is assigned to the Ares 10 as late replacement. This alone would cause strain for the crew but her faith and the mutual attraction between her and another member of the crew adds multiple new layers of tension. That novel takes us to the Red Planet. The Fifth Man then shows us there struggles to survive in the harsh and cold environment.

Booklist called the plot convoluted and to some extent I would agree. Believability is strained when you have sabotage, NASA plots, paranoia and one life threatening crisis after another, but that is what the science fiction and action genres usually provide. All too often Christian fiction is second-rate fiction but this is not the case with John Olson and Randall Ingermanson. This is excellent superior science fiction. The authors made me believe the science, terminology and NASA jargon that were spread throughout both novels. These realistic fine points make the story much more compelling. As I said earlier, both novels are hard science fiction. The events are possible with what is known about the science and technology.

The best fiction writers present their stories through setting, action, thoughts, and description. Many Science Fiction stories suffer from lengthy paragraphs of telling. While both Oxygen and The Fifth Man have some telling, the writing is generally well-crafted with much of the story told through dialogue or shown through actions.

Oxygen is the best of the two novels but as a Christian and a lifetime reader of Science Fiction, I can recommend both to fans of the genre.

Kyle Pratt
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