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Orbital Decay (Near-Space, Bk 1)
Orbital Decay - Near-Space, Bk 1
Author: Allen Steele
They are the builders of the future. The beamjacks -- zero-gee construction workers hired to assemble gigantic satellites in the vacuum of space. Management and military think they have the beamjacks under control. They're wrong.
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ISBN-13: 9780441498512
ISBN-10: 0441498515
Publication Date: 11/1/1989
Pages: 338
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 34

3.9 stars, based on 34 ratings
Publisher: Ace Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Orbital Decay (Near-Space, Bk 1) on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really liked Allen Steele's "Coyote" series and spin-offs. However, I was disappointed in "Orbital Decay". Even though there was plenty of technical detail and character development this book was fairly boring and did not engage my interest like his "Coyote" series did.
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reviewed Orbital Decay (Near-Space, Bk 1) on
A quick-paced and realistic story combining the attributes of building and mining in space with a corporation run amuck with greed and power. I found the story a joy to read and easy to follow. Great tension, action, and even believibility.
DLeahL avatar reviewed Orbital Decay (Near-Space, Bk 1) on + 48 more book reviews
I approached this book with a bit of trepidation, as I had just finished MacBride Allen's book The Ring of Charon and my mind was still buzzing with wormholes, gravitic influences and Dyson Spheres. Orbital Decay is, indeed, quite different from Charon, but it was in NO WAY a disappointment!

Orbital Decay is set in the not too distant future and involves technology that is almost, but not quite, within our grasp. Steele's premise in this book is that the "third generation" of space travelers/inhabitants will be so-called "average Joe's," or blue-collar workers. (The first generation begin astronauts and the second the scientists/technologists who inhabit the ISS today.) Most of his characters are called "beamjacks," which is a term for a contruction worker who happens to be working building satellites, etc., in cislunar space.

The plot itself doesn't really begin until quite a bit into the book - but it isn't the plot that makes this book great. Steele has the ability in this book to portray to a quite precise detail day-to-day life working and living inside and outside a space station. And not the type of space station you'd think of when you imagine the ISS. THIS space station, christened the Olympus Station by Skycorp, a private contracting corporation, is not run for the sake of scientific inquiry - it is run for profit. With all of the lack of focus upon the human element quite in the quest for more and more money.

What makes this book so very enjoyable are the characters, what they may be running from on Earth, what ulterior or idealistic motives they may have for coming to live in the "Tin Can," how they do or do not entertain themselves when not working and what they use for such entertainment. Further, all of these elements, plus the plot line itself (which would be absolutely nothing if not for these characters), provide moments of hysterical comedy.

After reading Orbital Decay I have ordered more of Steele's books and am anxiously waiting their delivery!


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