American doyen of nuts-and-bolts hard science fiction adds another
volume to The
Grand Tour, his next century saga of solar system exploration
- a companion to Venus, Jupiter, etc. The
Precipice, first
in a trilogy, refers in its title to the disastrous warming effects of the "Greenhouse
Cliff" on Earth's climate, causing flooding to coastal cities, drought
to
farmlands and displacement of millions who face homelessness and famine.
Hope to ease the plight of Earth lies in exploiting the resources of the
Asteroid Belt, the logistics of which needs the finances and high technology
of private industry and in the novel two such rival entities in particular.
Astro Manufacturing, Inc., headed by struggling, maverick, idealist
businessman Dan Randolph pools assets with Martin Humphries, (an
unscrupulous, spoiled-brat), and heir to a vast fortune who wishes to
dominate the market in asteroid exploration. Teaming up with interested,
independent parties who live on the Moon (as opposed to the obfuscating
bureaucracies and the pessimistic New Morality of Earth), Randolph and
Humphries set up a corporation to use new innovations in fusion and
nanotechnology to construct an experimental spacecraft that will make mining
the Asteroid Belt a financially viable reality.
Randolph's desires to help save
humankind in contrast to Humphries' greedy
wishes to control for personal gain, generates the suspense that drives the
plot, for the latter mentioned man will stop at nothing to get what he
wants. Randolph himself goes on the mission in Starpower I along with the
highly qualified, refreshingly feisty female pilots Pancho Lane and Amanda
Cunningham and planetary geologist Lars Fuchs.
Humphries, yearning for the expedition to fail in order to buy out Astro
Corp. and eliminate any competition, attempts to recruit Lane to spy on her
boss and at the same time he blackmails nanotech Nobel laureate Kris
Cardenas to sabotage the ship, an action that torments the brilliant lady
scientist. In addition to all this, Humphries lusts after Cunningham who
only cares for Fuchs.
In his unadorned, workmanlike prose, Bova tells how Lane proves her loyalty
to Randolph and how the various interpersonal, technical and corporate
intrigues get resolved (some resolutions with unfortunate consequences
amidst the triumphs). This involves cutting from vivid descriptions of the
voyage to the Asteroid Belt to the activities of Humphries and Cardenas et
al on the Moon's Selene Colony, making for exciting, suspenseful and
emotionally gripping reading with a climax that thoroughly satisfies while
leaving hints for developments to occur in future volumes.
Bova's characters here could be considered his most complex and interesting
so far with his story featuring strong and engaging women, a sympathetic and
charismatic protagonist and a completely nasty yet believable antagonist.
The supporting players also have enough depth to be distinctive in this
swift-paced, space worthy yarn that will add further luster to Bova's
already confirmed stature among the best writers of thoughtfully conceived
hard SF.