(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Antarctica by Kim Stanley Robinson | LibraryThing
HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Antarctica by Kim Stanley Robinson
Loading...

Antarctica (original 1997; edition 1998)

by Kim Stanley Robinson (Author), Robert Silverberg (Introduction), Byron Taylor (Illustrator)

Series: Science in the Capital (prequel)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
1,2012916,506 (3.7)71
The award-winning author of the Mars trilogy takes readers to the last pure wilderness on Earth in this powerful and majestic novel.   "Antarctica may well be the best novel of the best ecological novelist around."--Locus   It is a stark and inhospitable place, where the landscape itself poses a challenge to survival, yet its strange, silent beauty has long fascinated scientists and adventurers.   Now Antarctica faces an uncertain future. The international treaty which protects the continent is about to dissolve, clearing the way for Antarctica's resources to be plundered, its eerie beauty to be savaged. As politicians wrangle over its fate, major corporations begin probing for its hidden riches. Adventurers come, as they have for more than a century, seeking the wild, untamed land even as they endanger it with their ever-growing numbers. And radical environmentalists carry out a covert campaign of sabotage to reclaim the land from those who would destroy it for profit. All who come here have their own agenda, and all will fight to ensure their vision of the future for the remote and awe-inspiring world at the South Pole.   Praise for Antarctica   "Forbidding yet fascinating, like the continent it describes . . . echoes Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air."--People "[Antarctica] should be included in any short-list of books about the frozen continent.... Compelling characters...a rich and dense story...Robinson has succeeded not only in drawing human characters but also in bringing Antarctica to life. Whatever happens in the outer world, Antarctica--both the book and the continent--will become part of the reader's interior landscape."--The Washington Post Book World "The epic of Antarctica. This is the James A. Michener novel of the South Pole. If the meaty one-word title didn't give it away, the writing would. The whole human history of the continent is here."--Interzone "Antarctica will take your breath away."--Associated Press "A gripping tale of adventure on the ice."--Publishers Weekly "Passionate, informed...vastly entertaining."--Kirkus Reviews "Robinson writes about geography and geology with the intensity and unhurried attention to detail of a John McPhee."--The New York Times Book Review… (more)
Member:rondorn
Title:Antarctica
Authors:Kim Stanley Robinson (Author)
Other authors:Robert Silverberg (Introduction), Byron Taylor (Illustrator)
Info:Easton Press (1998), Edition: First Edition
Collections:Signed, Science Fiction, leather bound, Easton Press, Your library, first printing, first edition
Rating:
Tags:Study

Work Information

Antarctica by Kim Stanley Robinson (1997)

  1. 00
    State of Fear by Michael Crichton (PghDragonMan)
    PghDragonMan: A rebuttal to Michael Crichton's State of Fear.
Loading...

Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book.

No current Talk conversations about this book.

» See also 71 mentions

English (28)  French (1)  All languages (29)
Showing 1-5 of 28 (next | show all)
Antarctica is – like all of his other novels – unique in his oeuvre: Robinson never writes the same book twice.

At first sight it is a blend of near future adventure thriller, historical report, political treatise and landscape travelogue. But when I looked closer, rereading the parts I had highlighted to possibly quote here, it slowly dawned on me: this is KSR’s big epistemic novel. It is epistemology that subtly & cleverly holds together the different themes of this book: storytelling, imagination, science, ethics, politics, economics, the reality of nature.

As such, it might be the richest book Robinson has written – at least from an philosophical point of view. Robinson convincingly ties utopia and science together once and for all: this is no scifi, but realistic fiction about the essence & scope of science.

More on that after the jump.

(...)

Full 5000-word analysis on Weighing a Pig Doesn't Fatten It ( )
  bormgans | Apr 18, 2024 |
It was a very entertaining read with themes close to my heart: dealing with overpopulation, and gotterdammerung capitalism. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
I hate the word "relevant/premonitory" when applied to SF. It seems a horribly pessimistic idea that we can only relate to things that are right in front of us or directly to do with us and our own tribe or corner of the world rather than just relating to a shared experience of being human. I´m not an Argentinian but I love Borges and Cortázar. I never grew up in the post-revolutionary USSR but I love the work of Andrey Platonov. Ditto with Iceland in the 1900s and Halldor Laxness´s “Independent People”. They´re relevant to me because they describe the experience of being humans. All books, no matter how contemporary, will one day be set in "the past". All books will one day describe a world that no longer exists. Re-reading for example "Lanark" by Alasdair Gray, somewhat closer in time and geography to my own upbringing at the British Council, I was struck by how that too is set in, both in terms of actual setting and in its mental landscape and attitudes, a Scotland that has now largely passed into myth just as much as the Scotland of clans and crofters and clearances had before it. Our world, or rather our worlds, our individual experiences and memories and perceptions that mold our realities, are always doomed to oblivion, even if the physical places survive. That´s what I like about “Antarctica” - it preserves these individual slices of worlds from being forgotten, at least for a little while, before climate change changes it forever.

For me, that´s where the relevance of SF comes from and it´ll remain relevant as long as humans still exist. I think people will always want to read about the past - people haven't stopped reading Dickens or Jane Austen, Shakespeare or Graham Greene because the world they describe has largely disappeared. The human conflicts and dramas they describe are as relevant as ever. So, even if our world changes beyond recognition - some people will still read books, and mostly they'll read the new stuff, the stuff that hasn't been written yet, but a few people will read the old books like “Antarctica”, because we all want to be Wade (one of the characters in the novel) and not because they are relevant, but because they're good. Unfortunately, I had to go back to one of Stanley Robinson’s earlier ones to recover the feeling that he can still write good SF. Will people read Stanley Robinson in the future…? Who knows? What I do know is that “Antarctica” is his best work so far.



SF = Speculative Fiction.

Book Review SF = Speculative Fiction ( )
  antao | Sep 22, 2022 |
Decent enough yarn that's packed full of jargon that you'll be Googling to find out what it is! ( )
  expatscot | Jul 21, 2022 |
I quite enjoyed this novel about living and working in the hostile environment of Antarctica, but came into it with some wrong expectations. Having read a number of Robinson's other fiction works, I was expecting there to be some elements of fantastical or scientific fiction, and kept anticipating something along those lines to happen. ( )
  resoundingjoy | Jan 1, 2021 |
Showing 1-5 of 28 (next | show all)
no reviews | add a review

Belongs to Series

You must log in to edit Common Knowledge data.
For more help see the Common Knowledge help page.
Canonical title
Original title
Alternative titles
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Related movies
Epigraph
"The land looks like a fairytale."
—Roald Amundsen
Dedication
First words
First you fall in love with Antarctica, then it breaks your heart.
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Original language
Canonical DDC/MDS
Canonical LCC

References to this work on external resources.

Wikipedia in English (2)

The award-winning author of the Mars trilogy takes readers to the last pure wilderness on Earth in this powerful and majestic novel.   "Antarctica may well be the best novel of the best ecological novelist around."--Locus   It is a stark and inhospitable place, where the landscape itself poses a challenge to survival, yet its strange, silent beauty has long fascinated scientists and adventurers.   Now Antarctica faces an uncertain future. The international treaty which protects the continent is about to dissolve, clearing the way for Antarctica's resources to be plundered, its eerie beauty to be savaged. As politicians wrangle over its fate, major corporations begin probing for its hidden riches. Adventurers come, as they have for more than a century, seeking the wild, untamed land even as they endanger it with their ever-growing numbers. And radical environmentalists carry out a covert campaign of sabotage to reclaim the land from those who would destroy it for profit. All who come here have their own agenda, and all will fight to ensure their vision of the future for the remote and awe-inspiring world at the South Pole.   Praise for Antarctica   "Forbidding yet fascinating, like the continent it describes . . . echoes Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air."--People "[Antarctica] should be included in any short-list of books about the frozen continent.... Compelling characters...a rich and dense story...Robinson has succeeded not only in drawing human characters but also in bringing Antarctica to life. Whatever happens in the outer world, Antarctica--both the book and the continent--will become part of the reader's interior landscape."--The Washington Post Book World "The epic of Antarctica. This is the James A. Michener novel of the South Pole. If the meaty one-word title didn't give it away, the writing would. The whole human history of the continent is here."--Interzone "Antarctica will take your breath away."--Associated Press "A gripping tale of adventure on the ice."--Publishers Weekly "Passionate, informed...vastly entertaining."--Kirkus Reviews "Robinson writes about geography and geology with the intensity and unhurried attention to detail of a John McPhee."--The New York Times Book Review

No library descriptions found.

Book description
Haiku summary

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (3.7)
0.5
1 3
1.5 3
2 13
2.5 6
3 53
3.5 12
4 107
4.5 7
5 36

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 206,284,969 books! | Top bar: Always visible