Earth Made of Glass

by John Barnes

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

PS3552.A677 E28

Publication

Tor Books (1998), Edition: 1st, 416 pages

Description

In this sequel to A Million Open Doors, Giraut and Margaret are posted to the frontier world, Quidde, where a Millennialist black American sect is just one of three factions engaged in a struggle that echoes the 20th century wars in Rwanda and Bosnia.

User reviews

LibraryThing member liehtzu
Better than the stuff he's been churning out lately it's still very dated and one imagines that Tom is wistful for the good old days of the old war. These Islamic terrorists must have him totality befuddled. Nonetheless a rattling good yarn for the airport or the beach.
LibraryThing member Waianuhea
A worthy successor to A Million Open Doors. The depth of the cultures is just as believable and stunning as the first book. The story was sad but in ways that were totally expected. Read this!

John Barnes is definitely a person I'd like to have drinks with. He's been one of my favorite authors since
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I read Orbital Resonance when I was 15 and couldn't believe that an old white guy understand what it was like to be a teenage girl. (Still don't know how he did it.)
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LibraryThing member LisCarey
This is the sequel to A Million Open Doors, which was my introduction to Barnes. It's twelve years later, Giraut and Margaret are agents of the Office of Special Projects of the Council of Humanity, they're feeling middle-aged, and they've just had their vacation cut short for a new assignment to a
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really unpleasant planet. On Briand, two cultures that were artificial literary recreations and not overly tolerant of alternative viewpoints to begin with have been forced by inconvenient natural phenomena to live rather closer together than was envisioned when these two cultures were sold this very last of the partially-terraformable worlds at the end of the colonization period. And then things start to go wrong for Giraut, Margaret, and everyone else.

This is not a happy book, but it is consistently interesting. I should perhaps mention, for those who were put off by the violence of Mother of Storms and Kaleidescope that it has very little of that kind of graphic violence.
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Awards

Arthur C. Clarke Award (Shortlist — 1999)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1998

Physical description

8.75 inches

ISBN

0312858515 / 9780312858513
Page: 0.2089 seconds