5.0 out of 5 stars Space ships race to gain publicity and fame for their sponsoring planets
A young man takes the position of pilot and navigator after his brother falls ill. Representing Earth, Robert’s goal is to beat the Mars team which has won each of the races for a generation. Murray is the engineer who does the fixes that prevent disaster and squeaks out the last iota of performance.
This story is at least as good as Robert Heinlein’s early works featuring young people willing to do whatever it takes to win. There is enough science to make the assertion that a different fuel is a possible breakthrough overlooking some details while taking us on a tour of the earth’s sun’s planets and moons. The race starts on the moon and requires landing on planets, moons, and space stations. The goal is clear: beat the duplicitous Martians.
Technical difficulties and outright cheating present difficulties which in turn give opportunities for breakthrough problem-solving. Making use of gravity to slingshot is Robert’s best navigation skill. Piloting at high speed through the asteroid belt is top-notch; performing helicopter-like hovering is the second clever innovation. In deference to the American market for science fiction, distances are in feet and miles while temperatures are in Fahrenheit — unlikely 100 years from now after the holdouts from the metric system finally convert.
The author’s deft writing makes a quick trip to most of the sun’s planets exciting without being too technical has to be acknowledged. The details of eating, sleeping, and spacewalks to make repairs are detailed enough to be plausible without needing magic and a good portion of luck. It’s a great race.
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow
Just finished, what a page turner. great story from start to finish. can’t wait for the next book!! great job!
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Great Read
Once again Jay has given us a great book, we find young Robert McClain at the control of Earth racing craft against the team from Mars when his brother is unable to compete. As expected, Mars are going to win even if they have to kill the other racers.
4 out of 5
It is not his ship, or his problem…
…but suddenly Robert McClain finds himself behind the helm controls of the Earth’s Last Hope, blasting off for the Sol System’s most savage race—The Borman Classic. His brother Pete has planned on being the racer in the family, but an accident moments before the qualifying run to the moon takes him out of the running, leaving his little brother to carry on. Now he finds himself speeding from planet to planet, moon to moon, wrestling against the most dangerous forces in space, and worse—Martian skullduggery. Robert quickly realizes that there is more at stake than a racing championship for Earth. His life, and the life of his crew. This is a great sci-fi book and one not to be missed.