Moonseed, Stephen Baxter
Moonseed, Stephen Baxter
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Moonseed

Author: Stephen Baxter

Narrator: Kevin Kenerly

Unabridged: 21 hr 50 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/24/2021

Categories: Fiction, Science Fiction


Synopsis

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 ten-dimensional superstring nanovirus that literally eats rock, transforming it into liquid, and then into molecule-size black holes that devour the very fabric of spacetime.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.

About Stephen Baxter

Stephen Baxter is an acclaimed, multiple-award-winning author whose many books include the Xeelee Sequence series, the Time Odyssey trilogy (written with Arthur C. Clarke), and The Time Ships, a sequel to H. G. Wells's classic The Time Machine. He lives in England.

About Kevin Kenerly

Kevin Kenerly, an Earphones Award–winning narrator, earned a BA at Olivet College. A longtime member of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, he has acted in more than twenty seasons, playing dozens of roles.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Arun

The whole aspect of destruction is one that arouses a lot of interest for a non-connected observer. This could explain why newsreel footage of terror attacks, calamities and accidents glue so many viewers across continents to their television sets. Movies like Independence Day,Deep Impact and Armag......more

Goodreads review by Robert

I've read many Baxter novels, so when I started reading this, it seemed apparent that it was an earlier effort. I could hear his Scottish accent throughout! The idea is, if you'll pardon the pun, novel, and he fleshes it out fairly well. The characters aren't nearly as well developed as in his later......more

Goodreads review by Jordan

I read Moonseed quite a few years ago, probably somewhere, I think, in the summer between my sophomore and junior year of high school. I remember loving the novel since it fit in my wheelhouse of disaster stories and, I’m sure, marked my first real “hard” SF story if ever read. I say all that becaus......more

Goodreads review by Todd

There may be a bunch of geology-heavy sci-fi out there, although if so I certainly don't stumble over much of it despite reading voraciously. It gave this book a novel (heh) flavor that I definitely enjoyed. And, hey, the end of the world, so you know I'm in. :D (Don't get the impression that because......more

Goodreads review by Bryan

If you ever wanted to be an astronaut, this is the book for you.: This is really two novels in one. In the beginning of the first half, Venus explodes into a cloud of gas. However, this is merely coincidental and has nothing directly to do with the rest of the plot (except to foreshadow what may hap......more