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Chargement... The Compleat McAndrewpar Charles Sheffield
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Charles Sheffield uses genius scientist 'Arthur Morton McAndrew', and his space pilot partner 'Jeanie Roker' to focus on particular scientific concepts he wanted to explore in detail. Jeanie Roker acts as narrator. These stories were written over several years, there are nine in total, followed by an essay on the science involved, detailing any changes in the science since original stories were written (the earliest tale was begun in 1977). This replaces the earlier collections 'The McAndrew Chronicles' and 'One Man's Universe'. The 'Compleat' in the title is a little misleading since I believe one more story was completed before his death, this can be found in: 'Cosmic Tales: Adventures in Sol System' ediited by Toni Weisskopf and published by Baen books in 2004. This collection would make a great pair up with 'The Complete Venus Equilateral' by George O. Smith. Theres a great deal of science to get your head around, but it's worth the trip. Sample Chapters: http://webscriptions.net/chapters/067157857X/067157857X.htm aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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Presenting the space adventures of Arthur Morton McAndrew, space-time expert and scientist extraordinaire, and his long-suffering companion, spaceship skipper Jeanie Roker. Jeanie first met McAndrew on a routine run to Titan and quickly learned he was a genius of the caliber of Newton or Einstein. When McAndrew invented a space drive that let frail humans survive hundreds of gravities of acceleration, he disappeared while testing it, and Jeanie had to find him, using a trail of cryptic messages he had left behind.That was the beginning of a beautiful friendship, in spite of the gray hairs that Jeanie began accumulating as a result of McAndrew's impractical nature and his talent for getting himself into trouble with much more practical villains, such as... A mass-murderer of several million people A highly-placed government official whose life McAndrew saved, but in an embarrassing way, and who consequently wants to kill both him and Jeanie The ruler of a slower-than-light spaceship that left Earth a long time ago, giving it time to develop some very strange customs by the time McAndrew and Jeanie visited it.And there are still more adventures of this spacegoing odd couple in The Compleat McAndrew.Publisher's Note: Part of this book was previously published as One Man's Universe. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Charles Sheffield was an Anglo-American science fiction writer who worked from 1977 until his death in 2002. In 1978, he and Arthur C. Clarke each published novels featuring space elevators. Trained as a mathematician and physicist, Sheffield certainly deserves to be mentioned alongside such scientifically literate writers as Clarke, Niven, Benford, Bova, and Brin.
The Compleat McAndrew is a collection of short stories featuring physicist Arthur Morton McAndrew and Jeanie Roker, who pilots him around the solar system. The stories are narrated by Jeanie, a cautious pilot who sees her job as keeping McAndrew out of trouble when he gets lost in a physics experiment. She provides common-sense explanations of some of McAndrew’s more difficult locutions. She helps him battle the bureaucrats who want to reign in his experiments, but she is often jealous of the young women who see him as a scientific rock star.
Each story in the collection has a central scientific problem or idea at its center, often dealing with gravity and other astrophysical issues. Jeanie and McAndrew are more at home in space than on a planet. In “With McAndrew, Out of Focus,” when Jeanie observes a supernova from space while McAndrew is stuck on Earth, she feels sorry for him: “Me, I could look into the evening sky and see herringbone patterns of gorgeous rose and salmon-pink clouds catching the light of the supernova. McAndrew looked at the same thing and saw an annoying absorbing layer of atmospheric gases cutting off all light of wavelength shorter than the near ultraviolet. The Cassiopeia Supernova was flooding the Solar System with hard radiation—and here was McAndrew, down on Earth, condemned to visible wavelengths and missing half the show.” ( )