Kim Stanley Robinson is a New York Times bestseller and winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards. He is the author of more than twenty books, including the bestselling Mars trilogy, 2312, Aurora and New York 2140. In 2008, he was named a 'Hero of the Environment' by Time, and he works with the Sierra Nevada research institute. He lives in Davis, California.
Bestseller Robinson again tackles climate change head-on in this
gutsy, humane view of a near-future Earth careening toward collapse
. . . Robinson masterfully integrates the practical details of
environmental crises and geoengineering projects into a sweeping,
optimistic portrait of humanity's ability to cooperate in the face
of disaster. This heartfelt work of hard science-fiction is a
must-read for anyone worried about the future of the planet
*Publishers Weekly (starred review)*
A breathtaking look at the challenges that face our planet in all
their sprawling magnitude and also in their intimate, individual
moments of humanity
*Booklist*
Steely, visionary optimism
*Guardian*
A panoramic epic, the best science fiction-nonfiction novel I've
ever read
*Jonathan Lethem, Vanity Fair*
The Ministry for the Future is a great read. Robinson has written a
novel that presents the urgency of this crisis in an original way
and leaves readers with hope that we can do something about it. The
next chapter in the story of our planet is still being written, and
the ending is up to us
*Bill Gates*
Robinson is one of the world's finest working novelists, in any
genre. New York 2140 is a towering novel about a genuinely grave
threat to civilisation
*GUARDIAN*
A masterpiece
*The Times*
A deeply realised world that feels more like a peep into our future
than a work of fiction
*New Scientist*
Robinson seamlessly binds together characters and narrative strands
. . . An immensely enjoyable reading experience
*SciFiNow*
Robinson's writing is so evocative that you can imagine that any
one of his paragraphs could feature in the film of the book . . . a
thoughtful, innovative page turner
*STARBURST*
Any new novel by the great Kim Stanley Robinson is always an event
and Red Moon doesn't disappoint
*Independent*
Even at 600-plus pages, there's a leanness to the prose that keeps
the plot moving forwards . . . Robinson handles setpieces with
aplomb
*SFX*
A wise and big-hearted novel to read and then, straight away, read
again
*SFX*
Another stellar effort from one of the masters of the genre
*Booklist*
It's near impossible to capture the vibrance of the entire city in
the span of one single novel, yet Kim Stanley Robinson manages to
do just that and more
*NEWSWEEK*
Like all great sci-fi, New York 2140 is as much inward-looking as
it is forward- . . . Robinson's work has a strong, intelligent
social conscience
*GQ*
The lunar landscape is a source of beautifully described detail
*Kirkus*
A compelling vision of the future
*Science*
Starkly beautiful and fundamentally optimistic
*THE CONVERSATION*
Only sci-fi can drown Manhattan and make you want to live there
*BLOOMBERG BUSINESS WEEK*
One of the finest writers of his generation
*Locus*
Beautiful descriptions of lunar landscapes
*Guardian*
This may well be Robinson's masterpiece and is surely the most
important piece of sf in years
*MORNING STAR*
Sci-fi fans will love the detail and the optimism about humanity's
future in space
*Wall Street Journal*
There have been more than a few environmental catastrophe tales set
in
a future New York, but possibly none of them have been this
interesting
*LOCUS*
One of the most exciting books in climate change fiction yet
written... Both immensely readable and timely
*LITHUB*
Utterly immersive and unexpectedly hopeful
*RT BOOK REVIEWS*
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