My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This was a fascinating and very different sci-fi novel. In some ways it reminded me of Ray Bradbury’s ‘Martian Chronicles’ and Patrick Moore’s ‘The Domes of Mars’, both of which I read long ago as a teenager. To some extent this novel is a love story involving the confused emotions of Graysa Legare, and her burgeoning attraction to Lornick Drayton. Her confusion arises out of a long standing childhood friendship with Jarsh, the brother of Lornick. Jarsh is devoted to Graysa and is the person to whom she has often turned for advice and information. When Jarsh begins to investigate the beliefs and background to their deceased parents then serious problems emerge between the relationships and devotion of all three. The innermost fears and doubts of the main protagonists are handled very well, with the same sensitivity and skill that I have come to expect from Ms Wiggins, having read two of her previous books in the past.
This relationship problem becomes secondary to the eventual dangers to life on Ares, the planet we know as Mars. The colonisation of Mars came about through a global catastrophe that totally destroyed Earth, and the Aresian population depend upon the various biomes for life and their continued survival. As the story develops, more and more information about the different functions of biomes emerges, and the way that the author does this is both intriguing and captivating. She uses Graysa’s expedition training and her interactions with several people that she meets along the way, to inform the reader about survival and life on Ares, i.e. Mars.
Some of the current scientific knowledge we now have through probes sent to Mars is used in the story, such as the various mountains, possibly past volcanoes; and there are interesting speculations and experiments from colleagues, like Murray, Donia and Bridget, that kept me reading to find out more.
I would have liked to have read some more of the problems surrounding Mars’ colonisation, for example: the dangers from cosmic and ultra violet rays, due to the lack of a magnetosphere, and a denser atmosphere; plus there is a high toxicity of the soil on Mars, so growing plants for food has its setbacks. But, notwithstanding that there is an exciting denouement to the tale and I was left wishing I’d read ‘Domum’, book 2 in the League of Worlds series. That is a treat to come. I heartily recommend this novel to sci-fi and romance fans, something that I did not anticipate when I began the book!
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