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Overview
"Earth groans under the rule of fundamentalist political regimes. Crisis after crisis has given authoritarians the upper hand. Freedom and opportunity exist in space, for those with the nerve and skill to run the risks." "Now the governments of Earth are encouraging many of their most incorrigible dissidents to join a great ark on a one-way expedition, twice Jupiter's distance from the Sun, to Saturn, the ringed planet that baffled Galileo and has fascinated astronomers ever since." But humans will be human, on Earth or in the heavens - so amid the idealism permeating Space Habitat Goddard are many individuals with long-term schemes, each awaiting the right moment. And hidden from them is the greatest secret of all, the real purpose of this expedition, known to only a few....Synopsis
A novel of the ringed planet-and the humans who explore her
Publishers Weekly
Too many characters with too many agendas vie for prestige and power en route to Saturn aboard the Space Habitat Goddard in Hugo winner Bova's middling follow-up to Jupiter (2001) and Venus (2002). Ten thousand intellectuals and scientists, mostly people who don't agree with the authoritarian regimes controlled by the religious fundamentalists who've taken over Earth's governments, have volunteered, been asked or been forced to leave on the long one-way journey. Among them are Malcolm Eberly, recruited by the Holy Disciples from a prison in Vienna with strict instructions to ensure the population chooses the path of righteousness. Eberly agrees to his covert task, confident he can impose his own rule, but he finds that gaining control is harder than he thought. Holy Disciple spies continually get in his way, while one of his subordinates murders for a promotion. Blackmail, subterfuge and another planned murder pile on top of Eberly's machinations to rig an election. Though Bova thoroughly explores human motivation and desires, readers will have a hard time figuring out who to root for-is Eberly a good guy or a bad guy?-and an even harder time caring about characters insufficiently fleshed out. Most memorable is the setting, the Goddard, with its echoes of the sailing ships that transported convicts to Botany Bay. (June 9) FYI: Bova is a past president of the National Space Society and the Science Fiction Writers of America. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewSaturn is another installment in Ben Bova's epic Grand Tour saga, a set of loosely connected novels that examine the human race's expansion through the solar system. Here, 10,000 political dissidents travel to Saturn in a colossal man-made habitat to study the mysterious ringed planet and its largest moon, Titan.
The undertaking isn't so much a scientific mission as a sociological study. The ship's chief administrator, James Colerane Wilmot, is an anthropologist at heart and considers the two-year journey as a long-term experiment to analyze the ability of a self-contained community to survive and develop a viable social system. But among the ship's population are a small, powerful group who are scheming to systematically gain the support of the populace and create a new order in which they are the supreme rulers -- and they are prepared to kill anyone who stands in their way.
Fans of Bova's previous Grand Tour novels (Moonrise, Moonwar, Mars, Return to Mars, Venus, Jupiter, The Precipice, The Rock Rats) are guaranteed to enjoy this one. Not only does it further ongoing plotlines (specifically that of Pancho Lane's cryogenically frozen sister, Susan) but also plants the seeds for a whole new series of stories. And as is typical with Bova books, I was practically tearing through the last chapters to find out what happens to those aboard the habitat. After reading Saturn (Bova's 62nd novel!), I am reminded once again why he has been a leader in the genre for five decades. Paul Goat Allen