Moonseed
The NASA Trilogy, Book 3
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Narrated by:
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Kevin Kenerly
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By:
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Stephen Baxter
About this listen
It started the night Geena and Henry broke up. What was that strange light in the sky? A new star? A comet? Neither. It was the death of Venus.
As if to commemorate the end of NASA’s golden couple, our neighbor planet exploded into a brilliant cloud of dust and debris, showering the Earth with radiation and bizarre particles as big as bacteria - a 10-dimensional superstring nanovirus that literally eats rock, transforming it into liquid, and then into molecule-size black holes that devour the very fabric of space-time.
Feasting on Edinburgh’s primeval basalt, Moonseed is steadily eating its way toward Earth’s core. The death toll rises by the hour, as buildings collapse into streets that flow like water, as hundred-foot tsunamis obliterate Seattle and Vancouver, and as volcanoes sprout like weeds across the planet’s quickly decaying mantle.
NASA “rock-jockey” Henry Meacher and his Japanese colleague, Blue, race to cut off the virus and save what is left of the Earth. Meanwhile Henry’s ex, Geena, straps in with a Russian cosmonaut for a daredevil Moon voyage, ultimately reuniting with Henry and searching for the lunar ice deposits that might make possible the greatest evacuation since Noah braved the Flood.
And a mother and her young son clamber for the last solid ground in the liquefying Scottish Highlands, under the baleful stars of a dying universe....
Audacious beyond comparison, grand in conception, and gripping in execution, Moonseed is the first modern novel to do justice to the awesome terror and promise implicit in quantum physics. Like all of Baxter’s work, it blazes new paths from which science fiction will surely follow in the years to come, and becomes required listening for anyone wishing to understand the awesome promise - and threat - revealed by modern science.
©1998 Stephen Baxter (P)2021 Blackstone PublishingWhat listeners say about Moonseed
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- R J VAUGHAN
- 26-06-22
Unfortunately laughable accents and pronunciation
Oh if only they’d chosen a voice over person who had taken the time to speak to someone Scottish. The early parts of the book are lol badly pronounced, given the frequency of use of Edin-boro and Glas-gow along with characters who could come from Scotland Ireland Newcastle or Jamaica in a single sentence.
The story is good, a bit more fiction and a little less heavy going science than previous books in the trilogy, a fitting conclusion for those who made it past the reading.
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- Amanda
- 08-10-22
Great story, terrible delivery.
The story romps along - I'm enjoying it. But oh my - the accents. Given that the first few chapters are set in Scotland (Edin-burrow!!!) it would have been sensible to find a narrator willing to invest in a Scottish accent rather than mangling it. It's very off-putting.
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- Darloboy
- 02-12-21
Disappointing
I like Stephen Baxter as an author but this is definitely the third book of the NASA trilogy. Parts seemed like he had promised a certain number of words to the publisher and was struggling to
fulfill the commitment. The reader's incorrect/American pronunciation especially of place-names was annoying in the extreme. Overall, disappointing but don't let this put you off Stephen Baxter. He can and has done better!
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- Jennyfleur
- 09-01-22
Fantastic story; tense. Should be a film
A great story about humankind's desire to explore; but also to break the rules; with undesirable consequences. The moon is a really underrated and under-explored rock and deserves more investigation. This book touches on that. I would recommend this; without a doubt.
I requested this book for my birthday 20 years ago after borrowing it from the library because I was enjoying it. I was bought the hardback version which was difficult to take around while I commuted... I started it three times and was cometary immersed but always got distracted about half way through. A few years ago, I found the book as paperback in a charity shop and started reading again. I've not picked the book up again for over 5 years though, only because I never have the mindset to read. When Covid hit, I started with Audible. I found this and was so excited! finally I get to finish the story. Stephen Baxter has written some truly amazing books, and also wrote a couple in collaboration with Arthur C Clarke. tThe Origins series is also good.
Not keen to give a bad rating; but the narrator started quite weakly and I couldn't get behind the delivery; especially the accents (a bit 'eek'). however this is a very personal preference. After having read most of the book, the delivery didn't match my expectations. However, it wasn't that bad... I persevered and what was annoying is now all white noise. He got much better later on. I often feel the authors should read the book as they intended it to be portrayed.
Altogether 9.5 out of 10 considering the narration.
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- Nick
- 12-11-21
Narrator awful
sadly the narrator has ruined a very good Stephen Baxter novel. Disappointing as the voices and accents are frankly appalling.
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- Eamonn
- 12-01-24
Accents
Hopefully the narrator never meets a Scottish listener nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen OK?
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- tracey cardew
- 02-02-24
Fantastic story
Stephen Baxter’s science novels are always excellent. What a shame this narrator has once again been allowed to ruin parts of it with his mispronunciations, weird cadence and intonation, and especially by his horrendous accents.
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- ligsy
- 01-06-24
Spoiled by one humongous misjudgement
The third in this series, this is as brilliant as the other two, BUT the narrator's Scottish accent is absolutely dreadful and ruined the book for me. This is a shame because he has read the other books brilliantly, and the bits in this book which do not have Scottish characters are great, but his Scottish.....NO NO NO. Awful. Distracting.
It would have been far better for him to have simply used his own voice....we know it's set in Scotland.....
A huge disappointment.
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- Andy Williams
- 29-08-21
Pil are ising microscope please get someone who can read
I am only half way through and tired of all the mispronunciation.
I heard Edinburgh as Edinborough and mis pronounced so often or edin borough or Eden borough but never edinboro as we brits would say it.
Some times the words are so mangled I have to stop and try and work out what the original word was as the contextual clues are missing.
The word in the title of this review is Polarising Microscope which the reader mostly gets right.
It’s like learning a new language. If the words are always mispronounced then you learn to accept the change but when the reader can’t be consistent within the same paragraph.
“He entered the bus carrying his polarising microscope. As he sat he pushed the pillar ising microscope under the seat” WHAT!
All the characters sound the same. Irish Scottish Russian all the same accent and equally poor.
Story is riveting though so I couldn’t stop
Will they succeed
Can earth be saved
Are we all doomed
Don’t panic mr Mainwaring (I could forgive this as the pronunciation is Mannering)
Does anyone remember that time Robert DiNiro said “A Seville Row Suit” (why was it orange coloured?) when he read Ian Fleming’s Bond ?
Grahhh phatchew
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4 people found this helpful
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- D McJannet
- 01-12-21
Great story.
Narration is not great. He could have looked into basic thi gs like how to say words he obviously didn't know.
I read this book over 10 years ago and always wanted a audio version.
I will sum up the story:
"A disaster!!! Quickly, get an American. Any American will do.
Listen to me danm it, I'm an American"
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1 person found this helpful