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Original Title: Pushing Ice
ISBN: 0441014011 (ISBN13: 9780441014019)
Edition Language: English
Setting: Rockhopper
Literary Awards: Locus Award Nominee for Best SF Novel (2006), Arthur C. Clarke Award Nominee (2006)
Books Pushing Ice  Download Free
Pushing Ice Hardcover | Pages: 458 pages
Rating: 4.04 | 13996 Users | 777 Reviews

Mention Containing Books Pushing Ice

Title:Pushing Ice
Author:Alastair Reynolds
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 458 pages
Published:June 6th 2006 by Ace Hardcover (first published October 27th 2005)
Categories:Science Fiction. Fiction. Space. Space Opera

Rendition As Books Pushing Ice

2057. Bella Lind and the crew of her nuclearpowered ship, the Rockhopper, push ice. They mine comets. But when Janus, one of Saturn's ice moons, inexplicably leaves its natural orbit and heads out of the solar system at high speed, Bella is ordered to shadow it for the few vital days before it falls forever out of reach.

In accepting this mission she sets her ship and her crew on a collision course with destiny-for Janus has many surprises in store, and not all of them are welcome...

Rating Containing Books Pushing Ice
Ratings: 4.04 From 13996 Users | 777 Reviews

Judge Containing Books Pushing Ice
Very dark, claustrophobic to the limits, but one of Reynolds best. Although its pretty static in action, its scope is as colossal as we got used to. And we get some really interesting alien species as well.There is also a change in the way the story is told: in bits and pieces, with gaps between the events, on which eventually we get some answers, but mostly the reader is let to draw its own scenario; I really liked that it put my imagination to work. Also, it is not focused on technology or

I am torn between three and four stars for this one, I lean toward three I suppose. This was not my favorite Reynolds novel by any stretch. I thought the science and science fictional ideas were brilliant as always. I found the characters and dialogue to be a bit too by-the-numbers for my taste. Oddly, the ending was excellent, vastly better than the majority of Reynolds' endings, and perhaps a harbinger or future improvement in the only area Reynolds consistently lacks in. I didn't enjoy this

3.5*'sI really enjoyed the story and the writing but there were some head scratching moments that were either too convenient or just didn't make sense.

I actually read this book in a rather disjointed way -- the first two hundred pages or so in one chunk, and the last three hundred pages or so in another, more than a month later. So that might well colour my thoughts on it. Overall, I enjoyed it. Alastair Reynolds' writing is always easy to read, in my opinion, and his plots are interesting, without so much technobabble it becomes incomprehensible to me. Character-wise, though, I'm not sure I really feel for them. They're human, with human

Review - Retcon OK. Heres the thing. In my initial review (quite a while ago) I ranted a bit about one or two things that bothered me about Pushing Ice. Lately though, I find that the novel keeps haunting me. A lot. Since this is exceptional, I went back and had a quick glance at some of the details. While I still have an issue with some aspects of the power struggle dominating the story, I have to admit that there is quite a bit of wonder to be had from the novel. The Structure, in particular,

DNF at 20%I was intending to keep reading until the point that some said "they really got hooked," but I don't care about this book enough to slog through another 50-60 pages. Someone dying was the highlight of my reading experience in the first 86 pages, and that doesn't seem like a great recommendation for it.I bounced hard off this. Part of it might be mood, but I think most of it is just my personal pet peeves.Here is a list:-The prologue angered me. It's about an interplanetary parliament

Well, I'm a fan of A. Reynolds so this review is comparative to his other works. First of all, the fact that you'll like this book or not depends on what you like about Reynolds. For me it's mainly aliens presented in author's style - strange, distant, unfamiliar. Cutting a long story short, this story lacks that. There are, of course, aliens, mystery and such but all presented in a way devoid of praised "sense of wonder". First half took me pretty long time to read. I had a feeling that
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