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This Week’s Science Fiction Book:
Firstborn
by Arthur C. Clarke, Stephen Baxter
Featured the week of June 29, 2009
The
Firstborn–the
mysterious
race
of
aliens
who
first
became
known
to
science
fiction
fans
as
the
builders
of
the
iconic
black
monolith
in
2001:
A
Space
Odyssey–have
inhabited
legendary
master
of
science
fiction
Sir
Arthur
C.
Clarke’s
writing
for
decades.
With
Time’s
Eye
and
Sunstorm,
the
first
two
books
in
their
acclaimed
Time
Odyssey
series,
Clarke
and
his
brilliant
co-author
Stephen
Baxter
imagined
a
near-future
in
which
the
Firstborn
seek
to
stop
the
advance
of
human
civilization
by
employing
a
technology
indistinguishable
from
magic.
Their
first
act
was
the
Discontinuity,
in
which
Earth
was
carved
into
sections
from
different
eras
of
history,
restitched
into
a
patchwork
world,
and
renamed
Mir.
Mir’s
inhabitants
included
such
notables
as
Alexander
the
Great,
Genghis
Khan,
and
United
Nations
peacekeeper
Bisesa
Dutt.
For
reasons
unknown
to
her,
Bisesa
entered
into
communication
with
an
alien
artifact
of
inscrutable
purpose
and
godlike
power–a
power
that
eventually
returned
her
to
Earth.
There,
she
played
an
instrumental
role
in
humanity’s
race
against
time
to
stop
a
doomsday
event:
a
massive
solar
storm
triggered
by
the
alien
Firstborn
designed
to
eradicate
all
life
from
the
planet.
That
fate
was
averted
at
an
inconceivable
price.
Now,
twenty-seven
years
later,
the
Firstborn
are
back.
This
time,
they
are
pulling
no
punches:
They
have
sent
a
“quantum
bomb.”
Speeding
toward
Earth,
it
is
a
device
that
human
scientists
can
barely
comprehend,
that
cannot
be
stopped
or
destroyed–and
one
that
will
obliterate
Earth.
Bisesa’s
desperate
quest
for
answers
sends
her
first
to
Mars
and
then
to
Mir,
whichis
itself
threatened
with
extinction.
The
end
seems
inevitable.
But
as
shocking
new
insights
emerge
into
the
nature
of
the
Firstborn
and
their
chilling
plans
for
mankind,
an
unexpected
ally
appears
from
light-years
away.
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