Titan Audiobook By Stephen Baxter cover art

Titan

The NASA Trilogy, Book 2

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Titan

By: Stephen Baxter
Narrated by: Kevin Kenerly
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Signs of life have been found on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon.

A group of visionaries led by NASA’s Paula Benacerraf plan a daring one-way mission that will cost them everything. Taking nearly a decade, the billion-mile voyage includes a ‘slingshot’ transit of Venus, a catastrophic solar storm, and a constant struggle to keep the ship and crew functioning.

But it is on the icy surface of Titan itself that the true adventure begins. In the orange methane slush, the astronauts will discover the secrets of life’s origins and reach for a human destiny beyond their wildest dreams.

©1997 by Stephen Baxter (P)2021 by Blackstone Publishing
Science Fiction Solar System Hard Science Fiction Fiction Mythology Ancient Greece Greek Mythology
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I decided to finish the series this past week, and so on Titan. As usual, Kevin Kenerly does a solid job ( sometimes a bit over the top, but hey, we all do that sometimes ) taking Baxters' story and bringing the characters off the page and into your head.

Baxter can be a bit repetitive, and the listener is never quite sure about his statements ( is he pro-manned space travel, anti-NASA, or what? ), and the never-ending references to old NASA traditions can get a bit trite.

That said, this story moves along, not quickly but with intense scenes and solid research. If you are into space exploration and reasonable alternative history, this one is for you. Recommended with reservations.

Part 2 of the NASA Journey

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This is a great book. I read the physical version. Was hoping to rediscover it here. The voice actor does not do it even the slightest bit of justice. Not a shred of emphasis, minimal effort at accentuation. Breathy, intonations with weird emphasis. The narrator seems to be trying hard to comprehend the text. It sounds like a cold first take.
I’m not through the first chapter and I don’t think I can continue. It’s a massacre. Give me the guy who read “The Martian” instead.

Lackluster, dispassionate narration

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An older book, but still visionary. Lots and lots of detail and fascinating extrapolations. A journey into the past of space flight and into a future that we are unlikely to ever see.
Also, two big thumbs up to the reader, Kevin Kenerly.

True scifi!

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bottom line: i dont recommend this if you are looking for imaginative fiction. it's a very technical and detailed novel, that moves very slowly. I did not particularly enjoy it because it lacked a creative spark, up until the last part of the book. hence, there seemed no compelling reason to continue reading for much of the book. the characters were static and flat. (spoiler) I was also unimpressed with the assumption that a single president could essentially ruin the world society in 8 years. that particular character seems to be a hyperbolic characature of a conservative, and this also soured my opinion of the book. given the focus of the plot, the author seems to emphasize the smallness and immaturity of humanity in the billions-of-years old star system. why was it needed to attack a political viewpoint? consistently?? it was used as a basis to bring about the end of the world. but it was so exaggerated as to lose believability. in short: this book was both boring and insulting.

this is not your typical sci-fi.

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I'll start by saying some of Stephen Baxter's works are my favourite books of all time (Manifold Series, Proxima) so maybe I'm a little biased. I absolutely love this book.

Set in an anti-science dystopian alternate version of Earth, NASA puts together a slapdash crew to send a manned mission to Titan just before the new conservative president pulls all funding from scientific missions. With the ozone layer completely stripped, the denizens of this planet retreat inward, choosing to spend most of their lives in Virtual Reality or seeking to go back to the days of hunter/gatherers.

This book goes from sci-fi to horror very quickly, as the crew sent to Titan goes through various hardships.

As my title said, Baxter is among the best at concluding a book. I wish this book was longer, giving us more time with the main characters as they struggle to come to grips with their new realities on Titan (I'm trying really hard not to spoil the ending here).

Though the beginning of the book is a bit if a slowburn, the ending is so imaginative and wonderful, that I'll definitely be giving this book another listen.

My one critique is the narrating. The narrator isn't bad, I just don't think his voice suits science fiction. If I had a million dollars, I'd pay for a different narration of this book.

Anyways, wonderful listen. If you enjoy hard sci-fi, you'll enjoy this. The first half of the book may be a bit slow, but isn't that the point of books? Not every chapter needs high action and a plot twist.

Thanks to anyone who read this review.

Baxter's Incredible Conclusions

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