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[NVV]⇒ [PDF] Gratis Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books

Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books



Download As PDF : Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books

Download PDF Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books

Tom Godwin is the author of thirty short stories and three novels.

Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books

This book is an interesting adaptation of survival of the fittest. Being deposited on a different world and having to adapt or die has made the humans a much greater adversary for the Gern. What was originally meant to be subjugation or death has turned into a victory for those who could adapt and did adapt. The human spirit lives on in this strange new universe. An interesting read.

Product details

  • Hardcover 190 pages
  • Publisher Benediction Classics (December 2, 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1849025770

Read Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books

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Space Prison Tom Godwin 9781849025775 Books Reviews


This was my first ebook purchase. The sample got me hooked so I just had to know how the Rejects fared after being dumped on Ragnarok by the Gerns. This is light reading. The story zooms out to generational views as a band of humans try to make their new world home while trying desperately to find a way off it. It zooms in periodically so that we can meet each generation as the humans evolved and develop with their surroundings. It's almost like watching technology-minded cavemen, which is exactly what these people are, without the tools at hand to pass to provide basic shelter, let alone educate the next generation.

Space Prison isn't "hard core" Sci-Fi. It's part adventure, part epic. It's a relatively quick read, the end is never really in any doubt, but it's also a "feel good" story. At the price...? Well, can't really complain about that, can we?
This story reminds me of Avatar but in its own unique way. Several hundred years of adaption and the conquering of the land and animals in the best way possible. The names were carried on in generations which was nice, reminding the reader of the original people. I liked the story, actually thought it was number one in a series and was somewhat disappointed when the end came in sight. If you're into this type of book you won't be upset to get it.
I've read this book at least 5 times and parts of it a dozen or so times. --The story never gets old. The human spirit can't be crushed.--This is about war, conquering and leadership (vision) in a setting and time-frame that will leave you humbled at the humanity of the people stranded on this hostile planet. As usual, great stories have reference to life today. War has its place. Sometimes it can't be avoided. War for the purpose of conquering and enslaving should meet a bad end (but often does not); whereas with the purpose being to liberate and set free the natural human spirit, war can ultimately be a good thing. A terrible dilemma, is it not? This is a great story of people who just wanted to live free but had to survive beyond normal circumstances... then rise up in order to change the future... not just for themselves, but for all humanity.
This book reminds me of "Star Trek 2 The Wrath of Khan", only from Khan's perspective, and played out over many generations, and the adversary isn't nearly as interesting as Kirk yelling KH-AAA-NNN!!!! The Gern do remind me a bit of original-series Klingons though.

Also this book is rather like the antithesis of stories like "Robinson Crusoe" and Jules Verne's "The Mysterious Island" which I am also reading right now. Put it this way, in Verne's story the castaways are smelting iron and making explosives within a few weeks of being marooned, and I expect they're only a couple of weeks off from their own spaceship. Not quite so easy in Space Prison.

I found the first part of "Space Prison" extremely depressing. I didn't realize until I read this how carefully an author has to "tune" the level of antagonism so that there's suspense but not put off the readers too much. In this case, the situation starts out bad on about Page 1, and keeps getting worse with one lethal threat after another. So many of the "colonists" die so quickly, that I wondered if maybe they were like cats with nine lives, getting to die over and over again. Not until pretty late into this do you get a status update on how many colonists are left, and I was surprised, based on the death toll early on I thought the population had gone negative already. Also he has a habit of killing characters off after just a couple of pages of development. It's kind of irritating, on one page a character can say something inspiring about putting aside tears and carrying on for the children and the future, and the next page they're dead. Yikes.

I also generally found the themes of children dying, and parents dying, and childhood's end, and innocence lost, very overdone and heavy-handed. Again I don't want to be that depressed. Honestly I had to read the whole book in one night just because I didn't want to leave it at a sad part and then think about it and be sad the next day. Well, you need to get about 3/4 of the way through before it's not too depressing, and then when you get that far you might as well finish.

I found the ending surprising, in that it wasn't what I was expecting, because it's what I was expecting all along. If that makes sense. As we were approaching the end, I had in mind what the plot twist should be, if this were a modern novel. In fact the author surprised me by not really having a plot twist. This is why I say it is a bit dated.
Worth reading! This book tends to gloss over specific events and characters by necessity, because it spans 200 years, so it can feel a little shallow. But the story is a worthwhile one for showing the idea of a culture totally dedicated to survival and to a single long-term goal. This doesn't have the depth of a Heinlein story like the similar "Tunnel In the Sky", but it's an adventure with plenty of struggle (with a ridiculously hostile environment) and a satisfying ending.
This book is an interesting adaptation of survival of the fittest. Being deposited on a different world and having to adapt or die has made the humans a much greater adversary for the Gern. What was originally meant to be subjugation or death has turned into a victory for those who could adapt and did adapt. The human spirit lives on in this strange new universe. An interesting read.
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