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Veronica Telles Telles من عند Bara Dhaka, Jharkhand 814158، الهند من عند Bara Dhaka, Jharkhand 814158، الهند

قارئ Veronica Telles Telles من عند Bara Dhaka, Jharkhand 814158، الهند

Veronica Telles Telles من عند Bara Dhaka, Jharkhand 814158، الهند

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A solid, enjoyable piece of science fiction. "Pushing Ice" follows the crew of a deep-space mining ship as they track an alien artifact out of the solar system and beyond. It grapples with many familiar themes--dissension among the crew; the hard struggle to survive far from home; encounters with hyper-advanced alien tech; first contact--but it does so with Reynold's signature mixture of hard sci-fi and interesting characters. Reynolds has become one of my favorite sci-fi writers, and while "Pushing Ice" isn't my favorite of his books (that honor would go to "Chasm City," although there are still a few books of his I've not yet read), it hits on all of his usual themes with relatively few misfires. The friendship/rivalry between Bella and Svetlana (the book's two protagonists) is handled well, and the Big Mystery of the alien artifact is sufficiently captivating. Veteran sci-fi readers will probably quickly pick up on the general direction the Big Mystery is going, but it remains interesting. This book evoked for me a lot of the wonder and (somewhat bittersweet) optimism that many Arthur C. Clarke novels do. The book's weaknesses don't detract much from the good parts. Character dialogue is a little stiff (it reads well, but often doesn't sound like something people would actually say in conversation); and even having finished the book I'm a little fuzzy on how parts of the Big Alien Mystery worked. Characters who have few facts to work with sometimes make improbable jumps to (correct) conclusions and explanations, which feels a little contrived. But none of these hurt my enjoyment of the book. If you like Reynolds' other books, you'll find "Pushing Ice" a fun read, although not quite on par with his best work. If you're looking for an engrossing sci-fi novel that visits a lot of classic sci-fi tropes without straying too far from believable science, you'll enjoy it as well. Definitely recommended.