Product: Book ISBN-10: 0-7838-8190-8 ISBN-13: 9780783881904 Publisher: G. K. Hall & Company Country: Year: June 1997 Edition: Lrg Size: 16.26 x 23.37 x 3.05cm Number of pages: 304 Weight: 680gr Binding: Hardcover
Product Description Science FictionLarge Print EditionThis novel is a must read for those who have followed the saga so far. Publishers Weekly* A New York Times Bestseller* A Literary Guild Alternate Selection* A Doubleday Book Club Alternate Selection* A Science Fiction Book Club Main SelectionAt the dawn of the fourth millennium, the frozen body of astronaut Frank Poole, adrift in its spacesuit after having been killed by the computer HAL in 2001, is restored to life and readied to resume the voyage that HAL had abruptly terminated a thousand years before. As we hurtle through the new millennium in real time, Arthur C. Clarke daringly leaps one thousand years into the future to bring the greatest science fiction series of all time to its magnificent, stunning conclusion.
reviews
Read the vision
After visionning the movies 2000 and 2010 again after few years, I did have a teast to see more from Artur C. Clarke. Well I got more for what I was bargening for. I wish Spilberg will pick-up and bring that vision to the level it deserve. Get-it, see-it.
Frank Poole lost for a thousand years!
»Just as it says from the back of the book ,the moment i started reading it i could not put it down. Especially since i am a long time sci-fi affacionado .Started to follow this story at the cinema watching the movie 2010 when i was a kid!
Immerse yourself like i did into this book and start coming up with your own images of technology and space adventure coming from this journey .Rediscover again the continuation of what happened to Frank Poole,what is he now discovering many years later and the ongoing mystery that surrounds the Monolith!«
Why couldn't Clark have left well enough alone?!
Not much to say that hasn't already been said. 2001: A Space Odyssey (the film) should have been the beginning and final chapter in this 'saga'. The movie was a classic enigma; the 'Mona Lisa' of cinema. Each viewer left with his own interpretation of "what the hell was all that about'? That was the fun, the mystery, the challenge of what the Odyssey presented to the individual viewer. To have it dragged out, ad infinitum, into a Star Wars wannabe, was just sad! 2001 Is still one of my all time favorite films. I was 17 when I saw it in CINERAMA in Montreal. I'm 60 now, and have watched the movie maybe 50 times. It still leaves me with the same chills and awe that it did the first time I saw it. Too bad it got dragged the the comercialism knot-hole! Kubrick must be rolling in his grave.
Weak
A weak ending to a great series. The sense of wonder was gone. Very little suspense and story. This is more Clarke's view of the future than it is a story about the future. Potentially interesting as an examination of Clarke's views on politics, but that's about it.
A uncharacteristically mediocre odyssey
Whilst 2001 has a certain mythical grandeur, and left the reader with a sense of awe and wonder, and is one of the greatest works of the twentieth century, Clarke's conclusion of the story one thousand years later is highly unimaginative and much more like 'standard' science fiction.
To those readers enthralled by 2001, and to some part, 2010, I strongly advise that you do not read 2061, and certainly not 3001, lest the wonderous illusion of the original story be shattered in an instant.