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Document Type: | Book |
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All Authors / Contributors: |
Ian Mcdonald |
ISBN: | 9781473202245 1473202248 |
OCLC Number: | 1023288426 |
Description: | 416 sidor ; 13.1 cm |
More information: |

Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Ian McDonald is one of the very best SF writers in the world. His novels are fearless, brilliant wise...they illuminate and entertain spectacularly * Kim Stanley Robinson * I will read anything that man writes-he is the most underappreciated genius working in the field today * Cory Doctorow * Provocative, gripping and prancingly adult, it's a stunning example of how good science-fiction can be, and proof that McDonald is one of the best writers currently working in the genre * SFX * Luna: New Moon is a world that has been intricately woven together by its author. It's compelling and thought-provoking, and all without relying on overbearing sci-fi cliches. Brilliantly done. * Sci-Fi Now * Imagine Ben Bova's Farside mixed up with Heinlein's Moon is a Harsh Mistress and David Wingrove's Chung Kuo series but then re-imagined for the 21st century, with a sexed-up, more global viewpoint and you'll get an idea of Luna. I foresee great things for this book and award nominations a-plenty. Recommended. * SFF World * Luna is a remarkable novel! It is enormously clever and spectacularly visual and yet nothing overshadows the strength of its characterisation. A standout novel in a year that has been fantastic for science fiction. * For Winter's Nights * There's a lot of intrigue, some violence, rather more sex - healthily polymorphous and energetic, this - and all the pleasures of a cut-throat soap opera in space: a sort of Moon-Dome Dallas. -- Adam Roberts * The Guardian * In its gravitas and tension and, alas, tragedy, it's damn near Shakespearian. Add to that all the compulsive qualities of A Song of Ice and Fire, as I suggested in the header: a setting so brilliantly built and deftly embellished that buying into it isn't ever an issue; a vast cast of characters as satisfying and sympathetic individually as they are as part of McDonald's elaborate ensemble; and a plot composed of so many threads that you never know where it's going to go-except that when it ends, it's destined to end terribly. * Tor.com * Luna: New Moon is the best moon novel I've seen in many years...Inasmuch as it challenges one of the cherished master narratives of SF, in which the moon is only a stepping-stone, and despite what it owes to the tropes of '70s-era social melodrama, McDon ald's novel has some formidable SF stingers not far beneath its densely textured surface. * Locus Mag * McDonald creates a complex and fascinating civilization featuring believable technology, and the characters are fully developed, with individually gripping stories. Watch for this brilliantly constructed family saga on next year's award ballots. * Publishers Weekly * Overall, it's a really good read - the environment is convincing, the characters wonderfully flawed and entirely believable, and the plot well-paced and gripping. It'll draw you into its world and refuse to let you out again. If you want to try an innovative piece of sci-fi, with a lot to say and a good means of exploring ways to say it, then this is the book for you. * SF&F Reviews * McDonald has created a totally believable setting and does it with a deft touch....This is one of the best Science Fiction novels to reach the shelves this year. Indulge yourself. * SF Crowsnest * "Luna: New Moon" is a refreshing and complex science fiction of the best kind - one that is universally clever and thought provoking, and one that stays with you long after you close the final page. * Upcoming 4 Me * Luna is a remarkable novel! It is enormously clever and spectacularly visual and yet nothing overshadows the strength of its characterisation. A standout novel in a year that has been fantastic for science fiction. * For Winter's Nights * This is masterful, adult SF and I can't wait to read the sequel. * BSFG * Read more...
WorldCat User Reviews (1)
Impossible to Look Away
This review was first published on Kurt's Frontier.
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This review was first published on Kurt's Frontier.
Synopsis:
Since 1969, humans have known that the Moon is an unforgiving environment. It exists in the near vacuum of space. It has no electromagnetic field against solar radiation. The dust is sharp. Add human society to the moon, and the elements multiply. The Moon has been colonized and is ruled as a feudal society. They call the most powerful families the Five Dragons.
Adriana Corta is the head of the newest “dragon.” She has fought for every inch she has gained, wresting control of the Moon’s Helium-3 industry from the well-established Mackenzie Metal Corporation. Now, she is at the twilight of her life. She has made many enemies during the rises of Corta Helio. Her five children must defend her legacy from her many enemies.
Review:
Luna: New Moon (winner of the 2016 Galactic Spectrum Award) is about the human colony on the Moon. Ian McDonald envisions it as a world of corporate warfare. The only law on the moon is contract law. There are no civil or criminal laws. The houses often use duels to settle arguments. Food, water, and air are commodities. If you cannot pay for air, you eventually suffocate. The result looks almost like Chicago during Prohibition. The various major houses, called the Five Dragons, control resources that are sold to Earth. They will use marriages of convenience, espionage, kidnapping, and assassinations to get what they want. Corta Helio controls Helium-3, important for fusion reactors. Adriana Corta built her empire from the ground up, stealing the Helium-3 market out from under Mackenzie Metal. This is something Robert Mackenzie has never forgiven. As Adriana nears the end of her reign of Corta Helio, her five children must prepare for the eventual backlash.
While I found it hard to like the Cortas, it was a hard book to put down. The pacing was constantly shifting. The end suddenly ignited like an afterburner. Through the excess and decadence of the upper end of Lunar society or the desperation of those who must struggle, only the strong prosper. The reader may not like the Cortas, but it is impossible to look away.
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