It’s
2019, more than half a century since space exploration began
unlocking the secrets of the solar system. And what secrets there
are, from the chemical composition of Uranus to the discovery of
Neptune’s odd rotation, the impact of Jupiter on Earth’s history
to the reasons behind Venus’ hothouse atmosphere. Also, sustaining
human life on Mars has become a possibility with clarity unlike ever
before. Spanning that half-century is Arthur C. Clarke’s The
Sands of Mars (1951).
In a meta twist, The Sands of Mars is the story of Martin Gibson, a well-known science fiction author. He has been invited to travel to Mars aboard the spaceship Ares, and at the outset of the story finds himself going through what a large number of sf heroes do at the beginning of their novels: learning about the novelties of spacecraft and spaceflight. Arrival on Mars doesn’t change the program; Gibson continues to learn what makes life on Mars different than Earth, and it isn’t long before he gets to put his own little stamp on the evolution of science on the red planet. (Sound sharp as a knife? No…)
The
Sands of Mars is not an overtly
terrible novel, but it is the poster child for most things that make
hard sf a poor form of fiction (but perhaps the ultimate form of nerd
daydreaming). Plot essentially non-existent, the novel is a carousel
of novelties resulting from highly non-standard situations—in
space, in lighter gravity, in a geodome, in a space suit, etc., etc.
While on one hand this can be fascinating—to have these situations
tangibly presented, but if it’s not packaged in the suite of
concepts that make fiction, fiction, then there is little contextual
reason to continue turning the pages.
Thus
recommending the novel becomes a clear exercise: if hard sf is your
thing, particularly an ageing sample from the 50s, then the novel
should fit. If, however, you’re looking for something of substance
in terms of plot or character, you will need to be exceptionally
forgiving of The Sands of Mars
to get into it.
When
taken in context with the ‘big three’ of his era (Heinlein and
Asimov the other two), Clarke has undoubtedly aged the best. The
concerns of The City & the
Stars, Childhood’s
End, and Rendezvous
with Rama transcendentally
human, The Sands of Mars
is too practical, too meager in substance to remain noteworthy save
as the first novel Clarke ever wrote, and for Clarke fans.
No comments:
Post a Comment