![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Arthur C Clarke "The Fountains Of Paradise" (Gollancz)

One of Clarke's finest! As always his characters are both immensely plausible and utterly empathetic.
The principal protagonist is this novel, set in the mid twenty-second century by which time Earth has already colonized the Moon, Mercury and Mars, is Vannever (Van) Morgan, one of the world's leading civil and structural engineers most renowned for having designed the Gibraltar Bridge. Morgan's current dream is a space elevator, stretching from the isle of Taprobane (a scarcely disguised Sri Lanka) up to the outer reaches of the atmosphere, 25,000 miles in geo-synchronous orbit, using the newly-minted hyper-filament technology.
To achieve this feat he has to overcome opposition in the form of a centuries-old community of Buddhist monks established in a 2000 year old monastery at the faith's most sacred site. Meanwhile Clarke gives us some of the history of the ancient kingdom of Taprobane (incorporating a potted but scintillating history of pre-Medieval Ceylon).
Clarke is not merely a master of the technologies (real and imaginary) with which his characters grapple; he also manages, seemingly effortlessly, to develop flawless plots suffused with totally credible human interests. His work has been one of the most compelling arguments to show that science fiction can also be worthy of the term "literary fiction"

One of Clarke's finest! As always his characters are both immensely plausible and utterly empathetic.
The principal protagonist is this novel, set in the mid twenty-second century by which time Earth has already colonized the Moon, Mercury and Mars, is Vannever (Van) Morgan, one of the world's leading civil and structural engineers most renowned for having designed the Gibraltar Bridge. Morgan's current dream is a space elevator, stretching from the isle of Taprobane (a scarcely disguised Sri Lanka) up to the outer reaches of the atmosphere, 25,000 miles in geo-synchronous orbit, using the newly-minted hyper-filament technology.
To achieve this feat he has to overcome opposition in the form of a centuries-old community of Buddhist monks established in a 2000 year old monastery at the faith's most sacred site. Meanwhile Clarke gives us some of the history of the ancient kingdom of Taprobane (incorporating a potted but scintillating history of pre-Medieval Ceylon).
Clarke is not merely a master of the technologies (real and imaginary) with which his characters grapple; he also manages, seemingly effortlessly, to develop flawless plots suffused with totally credible human interests. His work has been one of the most compelling arguments to show that science fiction can also be worthy of the term "literary fiction"
no subject
Date: 2014-12-10 11:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-12-10 01:04 pm (UTC)Hugs, Jon
no subject
Date: 2014-12-10 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-12-10 02:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-12-10 07:34 pm (UTC)