
Ben Bova's latest novel Mars Life

One of the positive aspects of Mars Life is that the good guys - the scientists studying Mars - aren't limited to white American men. It actually seems that Bova was trying a bit too hard for variety, and ended up relying on stereotypes, rather than interesting characterization. There is Waterman, the Navajo science director whose dead grandfather advises him in his dreams; Vijay, Waterman's "voluptuous" psychiatrist wife, who is of East Indian ancestry and Australian citizenship; Chang, the Chinese science director with a picture of Mao on his wall; Doreen McMannus, the mission's waiflike auburn-haired and green-eyed nanotech specialist and citizen of Selene (the Moon); Nari Quintana, the mission's mousy middle-aged Japanese-Venezuelan chief medical officer, Fulvio DiNardo, the Jesuit geologist, Izzy Rosenberg the British Jewish scientist and his colleague Saleem Hasdrubal, the black Chicagoan who attended college on a basketball scholarship. It seems a bit like the crew of the USS Enterprise, with it's artificial mixture of different races and nationalities.
Then there's Carter Carleton, a crusty American anthropologist who fled Earth under the shadow of a trumped-up rape charge. He's rude to the volunteers working on his dig site, very sexist, and unwilling to even try new technology. He is supposed to be a great scientist, but from what we see, his greatest skill seems to be his willingness to keep plugging away at his excavation even when the funding dries up. And this is apparently reason enough to keep him on, despite his bad behavior. Even when he comes close to sexually assaulting Vijay, she decides not to tell anyone about it because "she could handle him". What the hell? I'd think he would be the last kind person you'd want in a small group of people on an isolated research station. I suspect I was meant to feel a bit sorry for him, but I kept hoping that they'd stick him on the next spaceship to Earth.
But shallow characters can still make for an entertaining story. The problem is that the novel doesn't focus on the team of scientists. Instead it jumps back and forth between the exploration of Mars, the attempts to find funding on Earth, and completely unrelated vignettes that don't particularly advance the plot. Instead they are meant to paint a picture of a United States where religious fundamentalists have taken power. We have several glimpses of 13-year-old Bucky, a middle school kid who wants to learn about evolution and Mars, but can't because of the influence of the religious fundamentalists on school curriculum. We meet politicians who have decided to go along with the religious coalition to gain office, and a music industry producer who refuses to buckle under to censorship demands and ends up dead. The anti-science sentiment is so strong that terrorists are attacking astronomy department buildings. It is certainly a frightening scenario, but the frequent return to the American political situation doesn't really add anything to the story.
I suspect that's why I didn't find Mars Life that engaging: the interesting plot lines that looked at the study of the ancient remains of intelligent Martians and the interaction of the scientists facing both isolation from their friends and family on Earth and the cancellation of their fantastic research project were frequently interrupted with the scenes meant to remind us of the scary religious fundamentalists. I think I would have enjoyed it more if we had seen the developing story through the eyes of one or two of the scientists, and the American political situation had been left in the background.
It's only fair to mention that I haven't read the first two novels in Bova's trilogy, Mars (1992) and Return to Mars (1999), and perhaps I would feel more invested in the characters if I had. As a stand-alone novel, however, it just didn't work for me.
Read my interview with Ben Bova about Mars Life.
Read an excerpt of Mars Life.
For more about manned missions to Mars, check out the related series on Astronomy Cast: Humans to Mars, Part 1: Scientists; Humans to Mars, Part 2: Colonists; Humans to Mars, Part 3: Terraforming Mars
(Astronomy Cast links via Physicality of Words)
Image: Microscope image of the soil under the Phoenix Mars Lander
Tags:Ben Bova, Mars Life
Fundamentalists -- pick your flavor! -- dominating government and education and cutting funding for research? We don't need an expedition to Mars to find that.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the review. I might have bought it based on the jacket description, but good science fiction also needs to be good fiction.