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Book Reviews of Hothouse

Hothouse
Hothouse
Author: Brian Wilson Aldiss
ISBN-13: 9780141189550
ISBN-10: 014118955X
Publication Date: 8/7/2008
Pages: 288
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Penguin Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Trey avatar reviewed Hothouse on + 260 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Hothouse by Aldiss was a surprisingly fast read. I wasn't sure what to expect after the first chapters, but as it moved along readers get to see other regions of Earth and then Luna. I enjoyed the world building and the mad ecology of the no man's land (ironic that name given the status of man in the book) of the beach, and the encounter with ancient technology in the ruins of Calcutta.
Still, I felt, well disappointed. Somehow the end of the book was a let down and left me feeling unfulfilled.
chrisnsally avatar reviewed Hothouse on + 113 more book reviews
How is this for imagination, the sun is going nova and Earth and the moon are locked in a plan of gravity and no longer rotate, plants have evolved to take on characteristics of animals and giant plants, a mile long, spin their webs between Earth and the moon? These are only a few of the features which will grab your attention in Hothouse by Brian Aldiss. Some of the human characters decide to travel between these satellites by riding the traverser (giant plant spider.) The group knows that riding on the outside of the traverser is dangerous, so they break into a tigerfly nest which has been injected into the body of the traverse. Their encounter inside the tigerfly nest could be a scene from a E. R. Burroughs or R. E. Howard tale.

This battle continues until the group of humans defeats all of the tigerfly larvae; "They killed unceasingly with neither hate nor mercy until they stood knee deep in slush. The larvae snapped and withered and died." p. 69

The book is full of fantastic species of plants which Aldiss has created like the giant seaweed and the gunpowder tree. "...a great mass of seaweed had threshed itself far out of the water and covered a gunpowder tree. By sheer weight, it was pulling the tree down, and a fight to the death raged about it." p. 83

Each chapter of Hothouse if full of new adventures with new plants species. Aldiss has created a mystery of adventure with his wild, imaginative variety of alien life forms and alien ecology without leaving the previously familiar setting of Earth.