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2001: A Space Odyssey Books
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 Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going?
Because Arthur C. Clarke recently died I decided to reread his classic novel, 2001: A Space Odyssey. Some people say that the major knock against science fiction is that it's necessarily dated soon after written because of the progress of society and technology. While this may be true of many stories, 2001 is timeless. It's hopeful, it's beautiful and it's filled with themes that speak to what we are as humanity.

Evolution is probably the most important element of the story. From the beginning when primitive man finds a black obelisk and it teaches the concept of tool use and subtly changes these creature's minds the idea that our improbable evolution was guided by alien intervention. Then, just as humanity gained the power to destroy its own planet those same aliens had planned to help the descendants of those early creatures jump to the next step, as equal in advancement as using stones for tools were to starving primitives. The message I took from the story was that we are limited in how forward we can think and until we break through another evolutionary barrier we'll be butting our heads against an invisible barrier on creativity. It's profound and humbling to consider the possibility that there are beings who look at our restrictions as simplistic as we view the idea of making a fire for survival.

Invariably this novel gets compared with the Stanley Kubrick film and rightly so. Unlike any pair I've encountered, both the novel and screenplay were developed simultaneously and in conjunction. With slight differences the stories are complementary and equally brilliant. What makes me favor the book more than the movie is the ending, which is explained better revealing the true scope of the evolutionary step man is about to make.

- CV Rick, April 2008



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Fitting Monument to the Vision of Arthur C. Clarke
It is hard to believe that it has been forty years since 2001, the book and the film, was released. In 1968 it was a strange, mind bending, fascinating vision of the future. It is a worthy monument to the vision of Arthur C. Clarke, bard of the space age.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - R.I.P. Arthur C. Clarke
Goodbye! Your legend will endure as long as their is a mankind alive to read your words.

One of the great sci-fi books. Does anyone need to say more?



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Similarities to "Contact"
**Some Spoilers!***

Love how Clarke uses factual science like the most obvious crater on the moon to house the monolith, the tycho crater, as well as the very strange Saturn moon that has an all white side, Iapetus. How more obious can an alien make it for us to make first contact by keeping monoliths in the center of these obvious places? Besides the changes from jupiter orbit to the Saturn moon as staging grounds for the stargate I found the book to be similar to the movie/ book "Contact" by Carl Sagan. Not sure if you've seen or read, but i think Carl has read 2001. His story involved his character going through a wormhole to end up in a familiar earth environment (the beach) as well so as to be comfortable. Very similar here although in 2001 it is a hotel room, from that point however the stories change. A signal from deep space was sent to earth in Contact and from the moon monolith to deep space in 2001.

I did know that Bowman became something more from watching the sequel 2010 but not from 2001. Wonder why Kubrik left all that out.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Some powerful moments, some that DRAGGED
When the book worked, it was impossible to put down. Mind-expanding, fun, riveting - and creative. I loved the first half especially. But when it wasn't working, it was slow and I had to skim. Too much technical stuff, too much weirdness. It drifted away from the story and characters and turned into a dull astronomy textbook.

I found it interesting that the book was written more or less after the screenplay. For a book based on a screenplay, it outpaced my expectations, and was worth the read. What I also found interesting was that this book was quite a different beast from the movie. Yes, the "Hal" parts overlapped - and were disturbing in both - but the rest struck me as pretty different.

My overall assessment: fairly good junk food. Not too deep, but engaging enough to help waste a few hours of free time...


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