Rolling Thunder
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Robert Shore
> 24 hourThe entire series is a deliberate homage to Heinlein. The character names are taken from some of Heinleins best known works, and the voice is unlike anything Varleys ever written (or at least published) before. In Rolling Thunder, the homage becomes, if anything, even more obvious. For starters, the protagonist is Podkayne of Mars. By the last chapter, were finding a Heinlein book title sprinkled in every page or so. In the hands of a lesser writer, this would be nothing more than a gimmick. Fortunately, Varley has talent to spare, and pulls it off effortlessly. The characters are a little thin, true, but the action more than makes up for it. A very enjoyable read.
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Paliku
> 24 hourTakes a while but you fall in love with Podkayne (thanks RAH!). Varley has done it again! Looking forward to his next.
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K. R.
> 24 hourListening to the audiobook version of the novel. Its very distracting to have a male narrator for a book that is mainly female characters. The narrator is the same person that preformed the first two books - which was fine since most of the characters were male in those novels. Im sorry, but he just does not sound anything like an 18 year old girl to me - just a guy pretending to be a girl. The story itself - its a bit different than the previous two books in the series. Too much of a travel-log IMO.
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T. A. Clark
> 24 hourThe Good: The writing style is terrific. It feels human, it adds to characters, and is brilliant in its direction of the point of view. The Bad: Lazy story craft and characterization. Its a major turn off in a science fiction series to be presented with characters in the future that continually refer to present day themes and seem to identify with an age far before when the story takes place. Its a character driven novel, and Varley handles characters very well; I just found the continual references to anything and everything 20th century to be distracting to the point of pulling me out of the story. Takes a bit too much pleasure in its references to 20th century popular culture and other works of that time period to be a serious piece of science fiction, and suffers mightily for it.
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Chuck & Kitty Child
> 24 hourThis was, by far, the most disappointing book in the series, and one of the worst endings to a series I have had bad fortune to read. Varley can be an amazing author, but this time he fails miserably.
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John Ottinger III
> 24 hourRolling Thunder the new novel by John Varley, tells the story of Podkayne, a Martian Naval Officer and singer extraordinaire. Varley, three time winner of the Hugo award and two time winner of the Nebula award, continues to tell stories full of strong female characters, and twisting, curving plots. Podkayne is the daughter and granddaughter of some of his characters from previous novels, and her story continues the tale of the exploration of our solar system in the not too distant future. Podkayne is just trying to get through her required service in the Martian Navy. What she really wants to be is a singer. When an opportunity to perform her music for the Navy on Europa ((one of Jupiters moons) is offered, she snatches up the chance. Her story seems simple, prosaic even (at least, as much as it can be for a good-looking nineteen year old), until she encounters Europas freckles. After that, her life takes a drastic turn, culminating the revelation of just what the Rolling Thunder really is, and what it means for her family. Varley has Podkayne tell the story memoir style, reliving her past by writing events from her perspective. So its a historical account of fictional events from one persons perspective. Its a unique way to tell a fiction story. Varleys story mirrors much of Heinleins works in style and content. Like Heinlein, he uses free societies and free love (with some rather explicit sex) in his stories, so this work is solely for adult reading. Rolling Thunder is a fast reading novel that packs a great deal into a few pages. Varley can get as much into his three hundred pages as other authors do in five hundred. It is a novel that takes many unexpected twists and turns, and its ending is both surprising and an excellent set up for more John Varley novels to come. I recommend this novel to adults who enjoy Heinlein, near space SF, or character driven plots.
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woodworker44
> 24 hourhad other books from this series
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John
> 24 hourOld friends and new are found in this volume. Traveling the stars, singing the hits of past present and future. Loving, living, defending, prepping, and continuing the race. Diaspora can be a good thing.
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Michael A. Maynard
> 24 hourThis third book in the series continues the saga of an intertwined martian family. The story moves quickly between Earth, Mars, and the moons of Jupiter. John Varley spins a tale that makes this book hard to set down. One can only hope that the story will continue rolling on.
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Marshall I. Cohen
> 24 hourQuite fun. An old favorite.