I read this last year. Anyone want to talk about it? I know a lot of people who think they know Larry Niven, didn't like it because it wasn't what they were expecting.
Rainbow Mars (1999)
Written by Larry Niven.
This is part of his Svetz series, which you can read in 'The Flight of the Horse' (1974). Apparantly, these stories are included in the US edition.
The yer is +1108 Atomic Era, and Hanville Svetz is on his way back to +390. With him is a snake, about to become the latest edition to the Secretary-General's private Zoo.
On his return, however, Svetz learns that his employer has died. His journey has been a waste of time. But this is the least of his concerns. With the new regime comes a new role for Svetz, and time he is going to be sent much further back in time. And not to Earth. The new Secretary-General has greater ambitions: he wants to learn the secret of Mars.
What Svetz finds is a world rich in alien life - and alien politics. It is also a world unaware of its remarkable and terrifying future.
This is not his Hard SF, it is pure fantasy. If you know your science fiction, you will catch the references to Edgar Rice Burroughs, H G Wells, Ray Bradbury and such, and be greatly amused by this. Don't take it too seriously, it wasn't meant to be. I like Niven's fantasy novels just as much as his technological stuff, anyway.
Rainbow Mars (1999)
Written by Larry Niven.
This is part of his Svetz series, which you can read in 'The Flight of the Horse' (1974). Apparantly, these stories are included in the US edition.
The yer is +1108 Atomic Era, and Hanville Svetz is on his way back to +390. With him is a snake, about to become the latest edition to the Secretary-General's private Zoo.
On his return, however, Svetz learns that his employer has died. His journey has been a waste of time. But this is the least of his concerns. With the new regime comes a new role for Svetz, and time he is going to be sent much further back in time. And not to Earth. The new Secretary-General has greater ambitions: he wants to learn the secret of Mars.
What Svetz finds is a world rich in alien life - and alien politics. It is also a world unaware of its remarkable and terrifying future.
This is not his Hard SF, it is pure fantasy. If you know your science fiction, you will catch the references to Edgar Rice Burroughs, H G Wells, Ray Bradbury and such, and be greatly amused by this. Don't take it too seriously, it wasn't meant to be. I like Niven's fantasy novels just as much as his technological stuff, anyway.