William K. Hartmann, Mars Underground (Tor, 1999) William K. Hartmann is a working American scientist who has participated in many Mars missions, including the current U.S. Mars Global Surveyor effort, and has written many books of non-fiction and technical articles. His first novel, a work of hard science fiction about the near future of human settlements on Mars, Mars Underground quickly reveals that Hartmann knows whereof he speaks.
Hartmann is a skilled writer, managing to combine a dramatic, character-driven plot with loving and vivid depictions of Martian terrain and geology. Mars becomes as much a character as the three protagonists, whose romantic triangular relationship is well-developed and engrossing for its surprising harmony. The author also uses his expertise to provide for his novel a detailed background delineating humanity's founding of a colony on Mars, the impact of that colony's foundation on Earth and the subsequent changes on Earth. Hartmann is also quite perceptive in showing how, in the media, Mars -- which when first established, represented so much for Earth's future -- has become yesterday's news. The author uses this poignant irony of the home planet's minuscule capacity for wonder and lack of interest in absorbing knowledge, to underscore the ultimate message of Mars Underground -- the necessity to look beyond ourselves and appreciate the world around us so that the small but vital things that happen in our lives can be equally valued. Mars Underground, by having such deeper meanings serving as subtexts beneath the entertaining narrative that builds to a satisfying climax, is a science fiction novel that deserves a place besides the other excellent Martian novels that have been published recently. That Hartmann's book is also a convincing and believable extrapolation from modern science to explain the settlement of a new world and to convey the excitement of exploration and discovery is icing on the delicious Martian cake. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET book review by Amy Harlib 28 April 2001 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |