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LawDeepsix (2001) is the second novel in the Hutch series, following The Engines of God. In the previous volume, Hutch discovered the location of the Monument-Maker's home planet, Beta Pac III, which apparently had been evacuated. A few of their descendents remained on the planet living in primitive conditions, but most of the Monument-Makers seem to have fled the galaxy, probably to one of the Magellanic Clouds. Refining...
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Jack McDevitt's fiction always reminds me of what I was reading back in the '50's, because I think he may have been reading the same stuff back then. What he's managed to do is take an old idea from SF and make it new again. A rogue planet - this time a gas giant - is passing through another solar system and is going to make hash of the system and swallow one of its planets. The question is, who cares? Well, the Academy...
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I'm impressed with McDevitt's ability to make each novel quite distinctly different from its predecessors. "Deepsix" continues that progression and even though it is broadly set in a timeline he has used previously (and from a few hints contained in Deepsix, may return to again).Deepsix is a planet on countdown to annihilation by collision with a Galactic Wanderer in a matter of days. It provides the setting for a fast and...
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He's done it again. McDevitt goes back to the Universe we met in "The Engines of God". He goes back to his best material, the archeological exploration of a planet with a lost civilization. No other auther can hold my attention as McDevitt does as we uncover the mysteries Deepsix has for its explorers. We even get a "chrichton-esque" countdown to add drama, but its been a long time since Michael Chrichton wrote anything...
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