I cut my reading teeth on ‘50s and ‘60s scifi authors like Robert A. Heinlein, Arthur C. Clarke, Frank Herbert, Theodore Sturgeon, and a few others. Probably because so much of his output was aimed directly at the YA market, Heinlein is the one whose work I remember most vividly today, but all of my favorites had one thing in common: a relatively strong emphasis on the “science” part of the term “science fiction.” And that’s the kind of science fiction I’m most likely to enjoy and remember today even though I do like a well written space opera or alien invasion novel now and then. (My favorite scifi novel of the last few years is Andy Weir’s The Martian, a novel in which the science is almost a main character of its own.)
Although it’s a little too light on the scientific details to suit me, Ben Bova’s Mars Life does place an emphasis on science over wild fantasy to tell its tale of a Mars exploration mission having to be shut down due to budgetary limitations. It’s come down to a choice of spending money on space exploration or on resettling the millions of people around the world who have been displaced by the rising tides of global warming. Not so hard a choice, really.
But it couldn’t have happened at a worse time for the team on Mars.
A team of anthropologists digging beneath previously discovered 60-million-year-old Martian cliff dwellings has just discovered an actual fossil in what they believe to be a small city located below the cliff dwellings. But that fossil, even with the discovery of an adjacent Martian cemetery filled with the bones of ancient Martians, will not be enough to save the project because the Mars project has more than just money problems - it has very powerful enemies actively working to shut it down for good. As in forever.
The New Morality, a dominant group of religious fundamentalists is so politically powerful that no politician running for office dares run without its endorsement. New Morality believes the type of archeological work proposed for Mars is a threat to its core religious beliefs. If God, or perhaps even another God, created a Martian population and then destroyed it what does that say about their own relationship to God? Is everything they believe about to be proven wrong? New Morality already has ensured that all remaining government funding has been pulled from the project, and now they are intimidating private donors to follow suit.
Mars Life is as much about politics and personal relationships as it is science fiction. It is a cynical look at what motivates peoples and governments and just how fortunate we often are to have a handful of good people turn up in exactly the right spot at the right time when we need them there most. Mars Life is unlikely ever to be considered a scifi classic, but it is an interesting look at what it might be like to be trapped on another planet with only a limited number of people around for support.
(Mars Life, following Mars and Return to Mars, is the third book in Ben Bova’s Mars series.)
I grew up reading Heinlein's books and loved them. I'm also a big fan of The Martian. They knew how to do the science right in their books. I've been aware of Bova's books for many years, but have never read one. Even though I do love that Mars setting. I don't always love when science fiction books focus so much on politics and religion and social structures though. So maybe that's why I never started this series.
ReplyDeleteI just listened this morning to a really interesting interview that Andy Weir recently did with The New York Times for the Project Hail Mary movie. You should try to find it, I think.
DeleteI haven’t read much Bova, and I think it’s because he’s not quite the storyteller some of the others are. His plots are well conceived, and his characters could be interesting ones, I think, but there’s just something missing in the execution that makes him a bit of a chore for me.
I loved that Weir interview! Thanks for recommending it. So fun to hear his thoughts and views.
DeleteI was impressed that he stuck with The Martian for so long despite all the early negative feedback he got. He seems like a down-to-earth guy despite having so much success recently.
DeleteI do need to try reading something by Ben Bova, although I am not sure where to start. I will do some research online and then see what might be available on Kindle. And I will check with my son to see if he has any of Bova's books.
ReplyDeleteMy husband and son and I were discussing the movies based on Andy Weir's books, The Martian and Project Hail Mary, a few days ago. Which got me interested in looking for copies of either one of those two books. Some readers complain about the science in The Martian, but I think I would be fine with it.
I have one other of his books handy that I may read sometime fairly soon, one called New Earth. A new earth-like planet has been discovered and early explorers are about to leave on the 80-year one-way trip to get there. But when they get there, they find it’s already inhabited. Sounds like fun.
DeleteI enjoy the science in science fiction. Without the science, there’s noting really special about scifi; it’s just the same old story, but set in outer space. That’s why I’ve never seen the point in that whole Star Wars phenomenon. I just don’t get it.