Arthur C. Clarke
1972
Awards: Nebula, Hugo, Campbell, Locus
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ –
SPOILER ALERT
This is one of two Nebula-winning novels I have read so far that involve
a totally neat-o, unusually-shaped, artificially-created world (the
other is
Ringworld).
In this story, Earth is innocently spinning along through space when
suddenly our scientists see a blip on the radar and discover that
something is coming toward us at tremendous speed from the edge of the
solar system. As the object gets nearer they are able to see that it is a
cylinder, made of metal and so exactly proportioned that it must have
been made by an intelligent life form. At first they are afraid that it
is going to hit us, but it slows down when it gets close to Earth. A
crack scientific and military team is quickly assembled to intercept it.
When the team links up in space with the oncoming object, it does indeed
turn out to be an absolutely enormous cylindrical spaceship. And when
the team is able to get inside, they discover that inside the cylinder
is actually a world, complete with seas and mountains and
prairies. The catch is that the world is inside out, with the seas and
mountains and prairies covering the entire inside skin of the cylinder.
The cylinder revolves to create a centrifugal force that acts as gravity, so that the seas stay in place. When a human stands on the “ground” on the inside of the
cylinder, they feel like they’re standing on a regular planet–even
though the other side of the “world” is not under their feet but over
their head.
The humans’ exploration of the new world is detailed and entertaining.
Clarke not only thinks of the big things, like how the world is supplied with heat
and light, but also the little things, like that people might get a
little seasick when they crawl down the stairway from the center of the
cylinder (where they are almost weightless) to the ground on the inside
edge of the cylinder (where there is Earthlike gravity).
The book is not really ever scary, but there are definitely moments when it
is quite tense and suspenseful. Especially when you realize that the
Earth team might not be alone in the spinning space cylinder…
The
only things that rang a bit false to me in this book were the
characters. Clarke doesn’t seem to be able to write them so they
seem like real people, and their backstories all seemed a bit shallow. But if you can ignore the flat characters and the often
stilted conversations and instead focus on the exploration of the really
cool world-in-a-cylinder, you’re in for a fun read.
This is actually just the first book in what eventually became a
Rama series. The next books are also pretty good; they explore more of the spaceship and eventually let you meet its builders. But Rendezvous with Rama is the best of the bunch.
An earlier version of this review originally appeared on Cheeze Blog.
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