Having just referred to the book in my comments on DRG's latest ST:TOS novel, I find myself morbidly curious:
Has anybody else here read Paul Gillebaard's Moon Hoax?
Does anybody else here have as low an opinion of it as I do?
Aside from the book being a spectacular example of how not to write a novel, it's also a prime example of how not to market one: while a weaponized industrial laser programmed to shoot down spacecraft is arguably a science fiction concept, the book is really an international intrigue thriller being marketed as science fiction.
Has anybody else here read Paul Gillebaard's Moon Hoax?
Does anybody else here have as low an opinion of it as I do?
When we first meet the protagonist, he's portrayed as a complete and utter cad, having sex with women without even caring enough about them to bother learning their names!
From the early Mercury and Vostok missions, the whole point of wearing a space suit for launch, reentry, and perhaps docking, has been to make cabin depressurization a survivable mishap, rather than an instant fatality. And it's made perfectly clear that the author's aging sidekick is wearing that sort of suit, rather than merely a G-suit. Yet when it becomes necessary to open the hatch on the "stolen with the covert blessings of the Russian government" Soyuz that was boosted into lunar orbit, after having had to jettison the orbital module thereof, the sidekick knowingly and willingly buys the farm. A suit whose whole raison d'etre is to protect against cabin depressurization, that doesn't actually fulfill that function. What a concept.
If the weapon is a weaponized industrial laser, mass-produced by a U.S. manufacturer, then why not just send up a big heat-sink, covered with corner-reflectors optimized for the laser's spectral line(s), and let it fry itself?
In the prologue, a Chinese crew, on China's very first manned circumlunar mission, not only manage to land on the Moon, but do so covertly, on the far side, for the purpose of deploying a weaponized industrial laser programmed to shoot down anything non-Chinese entering lunar orbit. And they apparently go to the enormous expense and risk of doing so, purely so they can claim that the U.S. faked the Apollo landings, without anything inconvenient (like the LRO) raining on their parade. I continued to plow through this opus, despite the dumb mistakes, in hopes that Gillebaard would eventually reveal some better motivation on the part of the Chinese, something that would actually be worth their going to all that expense and risk.
He didn't. So far as the readers are concerned, they did so because their leaders were a bunch of black-hat villains out of a Saturday morning cartoon. The bad guys in a 70-year-old Bobbsey Twins children's novel have more plausible motivations.
He didn't. So far as the readers are concerned, they did so because their leaders were a bunch of black-hat villains out of a Saturday morning cartoon. The bad guys in a 70-year-old Bobbsey Twins children's novel have more plausible motivations.
Aside from the book being a spectacular example of how not to write a novel, it's also a prime example of how not to market one: while a weaponized industrial laser programmed to shoot down spacecraft is arguably a science fiction concept, the book is really an international intrigue thriller being marketed as science fiction.