3001: The Final Odyssey
3001: The Final Odyssey
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Paperback ©1997--
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Ballantine Books, Inc.
Annotation: The vacuum-frozen body of astronaut Frank Poole is recovered and revived. Sequel to 2061: Odyssey Three.
Genre: [Science fiction]
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #4716061
Format: Paperback
Copyright Date: 1997
Edition Date: 1998 Release Date: 01/28/98
Pages: 274 pages
ISBN: 0-345-42349-6
ISBN 13: 978-0-345-42349-8
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 97097172
Dimensions: 18 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

At the opening of the third millennium, humanity is spreading throughout the solar system, terraforming Venus, and already settled on the moons of Jupiter. Enter one who is effectively a time traveler--astronaut Frank Poole, frozen in deep space ever since, a thousand years ago, he became HAL 9000's victim (as viewers of the movie 2001 will recall). The revived Poole makes a fine observer, through whom Clarke leads readers on a tour of humanity's future, and he is also the key to contact with David Bowman, last seen encrypted in a giant black monolith on Ganymede. And making contact with Bowman saves humanity, for the monolith was programmed by its creators to destroy humanity, a plan foiled after it is injected with a computer virus. 3001 can stand alone from its predecessors in Clarke's Space Odyssey saga and is an intelligent romp, distinguished by Clarke's usual and inimitable wit and an unusual (perhaps unwelcome) strain of grumpiness about religion. Expect demand for it as the conclusion to perhaps the most influential sf series ever--thanks to the movies--and supply generously. Science Fiction Book Club main selection. (Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1997)

Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Fourth in Clarke's Odyssey series (2061: Odyssey Three, 1987, etc.). Here, at the beginning of the fourth millennium, the vacuum- frozen body of astronaut Frank Poole (murdered by poor mad computer HAL in the original 2001) is recovered and revived. Frank awakens to find he's a celebrity in an age of peace and plenty, with space elevators, inertia-less space drives, and miraculous teaching devices. Frank visits Jupiter (transformed into the mini-sun Lucifer in 2010: Odyssey Two) and ponders its ice-moon Europa, where a giant monolith is attempting to develop intelligence among the native lifeforms. And he meets that strange entity composed of Star Child Dave Bowman fused with a copy of now-sane HAL. Dubbed Halman by Frank, the entity warns of bad news arriving from the monolith's guiding intelligences 450 light-years distant: They've decided to destroy humankind. Europa's monolith, though, is just a supercomputer, not intelligent or self-aware, so Frank's associates decide to use Halman as a Trojan horse to infect the monolith with an irresistible computer virus—whereupon all the monoliths vanish. Clarke, while never uninteresting, long ago abandoned drama; here, he simply reports, with the dispassionate precision of HAL before he went bananas. (First serial to Playboy; Literary Guild alternate selection)"

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ALA Booklist
Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Science Books and Films
Wilson's Fiction Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Word Count: 50,037
Reading Level: 8.3
Interest Level: 9+
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 8.3 / points: 9.0 / quiz: 34786 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:9.0 / points:14.0 / quiz:Q00033
Lexile: 1100L

A Main Selection of the Science Fiction Book Club®
Selected by the Literary Guild® and Doubleday Book Club®


3001 is not just a page-turner, plugged in to the great icons of HAL and the monoliths, but a book of wisdom too, pithy and provocative.”—New Scientist

The body of Frank Poole, lost for a thousand years since the computer HAL caused his death en route to Jupiter, is retrieved, revived—and enhanced. In the most eagerly awaited sequel of all time, the terrifying truth of the Monoliths’ mission is a mystery only Poole can resolve.

Praise for 3001 The Final Odyssey

“A one man literary Big Bang, Clarke has originated his own vast and teeming futuristic universe.”Sunday Times

“Well-paced and absorbing . . . It is as a flight of fancy by the master of science fiction that 3001 makes its mark.”The Times

“In his exciting new novel, Clarke reveals the ominous answer about the ultimate purpose of the monoliths.”Daily Telegraph

“Serene, uplifting, and icy clear.”Mail on Sunday

“From the moment I picked it up, I couldn’t put it down. 3001 The Final Odyssey is a tour de force that finally answers the questions that sparked the imaginations of an entire generation.”—Buzz Aldrin


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