Ratings3
Average rating3.2
In this near-future novel by the author of The Forever War, an idealistic student visiting Earth from an orbiting colony is ensnared in a political conspiracy. By the close of the twenty-first century, almost half a million souls have already abandoned Earth to live in satellites orbiting the strife-ridden planet. Each of these forty-one Worlds is an independent entity boasting its own government and culture, yet each remains bound to the troubled home World by economic pressure. A brilliant student of political science born and raised in New New York, the largest of the orbiting Worlds, young Marianne O’Hara has never been to the surface but now has a golden opportunity to continue her studies far below her floating home of steel. Life on Earth, however, is very different from anything she has ever experienced. With power in the hands of a privileged few and unrest running rampant, the allure of radical politics might be too much for an idealistic and inexperienced young World dweller to resist. But even the best of intentions can have disastrous consequences, and Marianne soon finds herself unwittingly drawn into a wide-ranging conspiracy that could result in the total destruction of everything on Earth . . . and above. The first book in the acclaimed science fiction trilogy by Hugo and Nebula Award–winning author Joe Haldeman, Worlds offers a powerful vision of a possible future. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Joe Haldeman including rare images from the author’s personal collection.
Featured Series
3 primary booksWorlds is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 17 with contributions by Anabelle Stehl and Joe Haldeman.
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reviews.metaphorosis.com
2.5 stars
Marianne O'Hara, highly talented scion of a family in the orbital Worlds, comes down to Earth to study politics and Earth itself. In New York, she meets several men who shape not only her future, but that of the planet and the orbitals themselves.
I read Worlds at the same time as Orson Scott Card's The Lost Gate. I had worried about Card's possible inclusion of politics, but it didn't happen. Haldeman's book, on the other hand, is all about politics. The Lost Gate was a quicker read, and more fun.
My main acquaintance with Joe Haldeman's writing is via his Forever series (which was good), but I've read a good handful of his other books. In some recent books, he seems to be trying to recapture the spirit of Heinlein's early days. He's done moderately well with the politics, less well with the characters.
This particular book reminded me heavily ofHeinlein's Podkayne of Mars, and of Haldeman's own Marsbound. (Though really that should be the other way around - Worlds was written before Marsbound.) In any case, plucky, talented young woman taken out her element, meets strong men, presents polemics disguised as introspection, lots of sex all round.
Unfortunately, while the politics is not troubling in itself - and in a book about politics, I allow a lot more leeway - it's also not very interesting. It was too clear that Haldeman had put together a plot based on concepts, and stretched a human interest story around it, disregarding the thin spots. The characters are thin, sometimes inconsistent, and, despite O'Hara's orbital upbringing, traditional to a T (but with more sex). O'Hara, for example, brought up to be casual and comfortable about sex, varies between fearing someone will make a pass, and wishing someone would. It's a rare event that she makes one herself.
Mostly, I just found the book slow going. It wasn't difficult or dense, but it was dull. There's quite lot of travelogue - far more than is needed for Haldeman to comment on funny Earth customs. It eventually began to feel like sitting through a distant cousin's holiday slideshow, with no discreet way to sneak out the door.
All in all, a moderately interesting take on a story I felt I'd read many times before, and in most cases better presented. If you haven't read a lot of Heinlein, Pournelle, or John Barnes, or if you like those guys a lot, you may like this. Otherwise, I don't think there's a lot that's new for you here, and what there is is pretty slow going.
This was an advance copy. Mine was chock-full of OCR typos - dozens of them. I hope they've been cleared up in the final version. If not, you'll have a very aggravating reading experience.
NB: Received free copy from Net Galley.