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Mass Market Paperback The Web Between the Worlds Book

ISBN: 0671319736

ISBN13: 9780671319731

The Web Between the Worlds

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

WHAT SF SHOULD BE ALL ABOUT. -- KliattRob Merlin was the best engineer who had ever lived. That was why The King of Space had to have him for the most spectacular construction project ever -- even... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

good read about building a space elevator

This book tackles the engineering and manufactoring effort required to build a space elevator. Nice intro by Arthur C. Clarke saying that his idea was not plagarized. The story also delves into bioengineering and some of the possibilities thereof. Including some severe issues about the moralities of bioengineering.

Sheffield is Kirkwood?

"mybluemake" says in his review that "Charles Sheffield is (or was) actually pulitzer prize winning author James Kirkwood." I don't think that that's true. Sheffield did use "James Kirkwood" as a pen-name a few times, but there's another author of that name who did win a Pulitzer for "A Chorus Line" and died in 1989. Sheffield died in 2002. As for the book itself, GREAT. However, it was wrong about how the Space Elevator will be built. It'll be a thin ribbon a meter wide and the thickness of saran wrap, not a cylinder the size of a Sequoia. Not a big deal, as far as the story goes.

Tense, stretched, he spins a good yarn...

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to notice that burning vast quantities of combustible fuel to move an object from here out into orbit, let alone out into the solar system, is phenomenally expensive and dangerous. Science Fiction authors have, for decades, tried to come up with all manner of workarounds, from gravitation drives to Star Trek style transporters.One proposal that, until the late seventies, didn't attract a lot of attention was the idea of a cable stretching from the Earth into space, held in place by some form of geosynchronous structure. It's probably the least sexy technology available, nothing more than a really, really, strong, long, cable with objects climbing up and down it using whatever means fit the designer's imagination.Two science fiction authors, Arthur C. Clarke and Charles Sheffield, decided to raise the idea of such a cable at roughly the same time (Clarke's book, The Fountains of Paradise, was published two weeks before Sheffield's), and at once the obvious simplicity and advantages of the idea captured the public imagination. Well, sort of, currently there is no known material strong enough to withstand the tension a useful cable would carry, but we're probably not far off.This book is a treat. As well as the story itself, mostly a thriller centered around an engineer (who builds the cable, 'natch), a billionaire solar system miner, and a dubious amoral biologist, the book comes with a contribution from Arthur C Clarke on the history of the how the idea was brought to press, and a long appendix detailing the physics involved in building a "beanstalk" (Sheffield's name for the thing.) It was this part I personally found most interesting - it covered how such a thing would be built, other designs centered around the same principle, advantages the cable would have such as the ability to slingshot ships from the end, using the Earth's own rotation to move objects to anywhere in the solar system.The novel itself is a multi-layered story which is centered so much around a sub-plot that the beanstalk itself is almost an afterthought. In a pinch, Merlin, the main character, investigates the death of his parents and why they were murdered, after the new project he's hired to lead unexpectedly brings him into contact with people who were involved or knew the reasons. The Science in the Fiction includes the beanstalk (obviously), genetic engineering, the mining of asteroids and other trips around the solar system. About my only grouse is that the characters are a little wooden and come across in that kind of pseudo-machismo usually associated with salesman culture and office politics, something that ought not to have irritated me to the extent that it did.A wonderful book though, proposing a wonderful idea that, if ever implemented, will probably mean more for mankind's eventual exploration of space than the moon landings themselves.

find this one!

merlin is an engineer of the future- he builds in space. the book is about the expense and limits of transporting goods and persons between earth's surface and space, and merlin's collaboration with a space ore miner to build a ' skyhook' or 'beanstalk'- a transport tower anchored on the earth's surface and extending into orbit- that would allow constant, cheap, easy travel into space. a neat story by itself, but i think made a lot more interesting by the fact that almost simultaneously, arthur c clarke published a book about an engineer building a 'skyhook' ....- apparently neither knowing about the others' publication until after the fact. the juxtaposition makes an interesting comparison of the idea.

see my review on the other listing of this book

i think 'a reviewer' of feb 20, '97 must be thinking of a different book!!
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