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Red Thunder by John Varley
pub: Ace. 411 page hardback. Price: $23.95 (US), $36.00 (CAN). ISBN: 0-441-01015-6

check out website: www.penguinputnam.com and www.varley.net


Although it was only a few years after my time, do you remember those Mickey Rooney/Liz Taylor juvenile films where they create a theatre in their backyard that looks like they had some Hollywood crew helping out on?

You can also trace the routes down to the old pulps and comics where the scientist in his private lab creates a spaceship and shoots off into outer space. Dick Seaton would be proud flying his Skylark.


This is the modern day Science Fiction equivalent only it's done by John Varley and it really works. Four older teens cruising the beach run over a drunk on the beach. Fortunately, he's not injured and they take him back to his house. The drunk is Travis Broussard, ex-astronaut, dropped from the space programme after successfully landing an endangered spaceship while under the influence of alcohol. The four teens are Manny, Kelly, Dak and Alicia, each with some fascination in space and speed and bright and determined in their own ways.

They meet Travis' brain-damaged cousin genius, Jubal, who has created the Squeezer, a device that can create bubbles of unlimited energy. Between them, they create the Red Thunder, a spaceship to go to Mars to get the jump on a Chinese mission and rescue the American Ares Seven mission which Jubal thinks is going to run into trouble. The Ares also has on board Travis' ex-wife. Both spaceships have been in flight for months. Red Thunder gets to Mars in three days.

Varley really demonstrates his strength with characters here. Each are distinctive and interesting. The building of the spaceship is going to make anyone with a couple million dollars to spend contemplate with wide-eyed wonder except the Squeezer doesn't exist yet. Varley drags you into his stories as positive page-turners.

I did get the impression that he was out to prove a point with this novel in that it was set in the near future and had nothing to do with his Eight Worlds reality. Heinlein is indicated as a reference and mentor here but this is no 'Space Family Stone'. The characters are in a modern world with their own insecurities. A great novel to enjoy in the summer.

GF Willmetts


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