Sixty Days and Counting
by Kim Stanley RobinsonSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 227)
Read in August, 2008
All loose ends wrapped up...In my review of Fifty Below IO worried that Robinson was going to pull some magic "it'll all work out" bit. The thing is, he did...and I didn't even see it until it was done. He uses a sort of narrative time-warp to go from pie-in-the-sky brainstorming to 'maybe we can do this' to 'up and running'. What I'd expect to be a ten-year plan suddenly is going in about a year of narrative time. Hell he wraps up with a trple wedding (close-enough).
That said,...more
That said,...more
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Read in April, 2007
This is the final book in Robinson's "Abrupt Climate Change Trilogy" (I don't know what the official trilogy name is. Maybe it's the "Counting By Tens Trilogy."). Anyhow, this one is more a return to the form of the first book, in that I liked it more than I liked the second, but still less than I liked then first. Got that? I was thinking about this novel the other day, and I realized it had no actual plot. It had a couple of subplots, but no plot. The subplot with the Quibl...more
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Read in January, 2008
The problem with Kim Stanley Robinson's 'trilogies' is that they don't seem to end. We, the readers seem to leave them at a point and the characters in the books go their own ways. That said, KSR has attempted to remedy that somewhat in his latest trilogy-ender 'Sixty Days and Counting'
The first two books in the 'Science in the Capital' Trilogy had the easy parts, introduce the characters and the situation and crank up the heat for the conflict. The final book always has the heavy lifting of ...more
The first two books in the 'Science in the Capital' Trilogy had the easy parts, introduce the characters and the situation and crank up the heat for the conflict. The final book always has the heavy lifting of ...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
everyone
Kim Stanley Robinson is a great author. I have loved all his books, especially this trilogy. It all started with Forty Signs of Rain, I was hooked. His characters seem to come to life, and they are all very different. There is Frank (one of my favorite characters) who is an adventurer, rock-climber, kayaker, hiker, scientist, friends, almost Buddhist, and just a reg...more
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Read in December, 2008
Pretty good read.
The big social question of the books was how we get people to act in the 'always generous' mode of our Prisoner's Dilemma. That is, with the world going to hell in a handbasket, how do we keep people from grabbing what they can for themselves while making things far worse for others?
One thing this trilogy made me realize is that it's very possible people will flip nearly instantly from being global warming deniers to throwing their hands up and saying, "It's too lat...more
The big social question of the books was how we get people to act in the 'always generous' mode of our Prisoner's Dilemma. That is, with the world going to hell in a handbasket, how do we keep people from grabbing what they can for themselves while making things far worse for others?
One thing this trilogy made me realize is that it's very possible people will flip nearly instantly from being global warming deniers to throwing their hands up and saying, "It's too lat...more
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Read in March, 2007
SIXTY DAYS AND COUNTING BY KIM STANLEY ROBINSON: Kim Stanley Robinson has released the conclusion to his trilogy, Sixty Days and Counting, just in time! The hardcover is out and the paperback will be out at Christmas, if not, early next year: just in time for everyone to buy it, read the trilogy, and decide who to vote for in the Presidential elections of November 2008. Again, Robinson is not look to wow and amaze readers with shocking sci-fi events, but keeping true to the close reality of hi...more
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Read in June, 2007
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
KSR fans, sci fi futurists, climate change junkies
Aaah, finally the last of the trilogy. It comforts me to know that there are some people in the world with fantastic ideas about what we can do to fix all the damage we humans have been inflicting on the planet. Although this book lacks any of the spectacular climatic apocalypses of the previous two, it sets about tieing things up. Phil Chase the amazing, but unfortunately mythical politician, has been elected President of the USA and is going hammer and tongs on righting wrongs, both climate, e...more
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WOW. I wasn't super impressed with the first two, although I think KSR is a real visionary. This one makes up for them, a incredible, thoughtful, hopeful glimpse of a future we could have if we as a world community can just pull our heads out of our collective asses. The setting is a very possible future, just a few years from now. A new administation is in place, with a more promising global vision than the one we've been left holding the bag by. Global crises and extreme climate change are occ...more
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Read in January, 2008
This is the last of a trilogy from KSR. I'm not fond of the trilogy as I think the steam is out of the story a lot of times. That was the case here and if not for one really interesting storyline (of 3 or 4 followed in the book), this would have been rated lower. Robinson, who has dabbled in hard sci-fi (the great Mars series), alternative history (his 3 Californias or Days of Salt and Rice) is one of the best sci-fi, futurist writers out there. This is an eco-thriller/warning/harbinger of the c...more
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Read in August, 2008
A geopoliticalecothriller... I read the first book and was interested enough to read the rest of the trilogy. This would definitely not be my favorite Robinson series (I prefer the Mars trilogy), although it had some good subplots. This last book just went completely off the tracks in terms of political neutrality to the point where it seemed more like an author's diatribe against capitalism than character or storyline development. This opinion is primarily due to the multipage monologue blo...more
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Read in May, 2008
A fascinating conclusion to this well-told near-future ecoscifi trilogy. The climatology science is very well done and meshes quite well with the personal stories, although the political part of this story stretches belief a bit (the President has a blog? and has the Dalai Lama officiate his wedding?) -- but maybe I'm just cynical that such progressive causes would be supported by the populace, even after the traumatic climate change described here.
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Read in December, 2007
Disappointing end to the trilogy. Seems to have wandered from the environmental ideas (the strengths of book 1 & 2) as the main thrust of the stories. Wrapped up the character storylines in an imcomplete and perfunctory way. No environmental resolution, no satisfying human resolution, left me hanging. I see enough of that in real life. This is a novel and would be improved by having a beginning, a middle, and an end. (Thank you Aristotle.)
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Read in May, 2008
Glad to be done with this trilogy. While well-written, I would have preferred more actual science and, well, plot, over the long-winded tale of Frank's personal struggles. Still, the whole Chase presidency was a nice dreamland of what a good administration could only accomplish in a novel. Never in reality. Especially liked the Cut to the Chase blog excerpts.
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Read in January, 2007
The final book of a trilogy about climate change and public policy. Maybe because the author is wrapping things up, and making a point throughout all three novels about climate change, I didn't get quite the same kick out of this one as I did the previous two novels. Still, one of the better reads on my list.
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Read in August, 2007
The book has started quite slow and is rather dull so far. It is the first fictional account of climate change I have read. The political machinations of the new president and his staff are of some interest.Some swipes at our current president (not by name .. just policy steps he has taken) are there.
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Read in March, 2008
The science is good, and the predictions of environmental disaster are realistic. I was annoyed that he split one book into three, as a trilogy. The ending was not particularly satisfying.
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This book was recomended by author Dan Flores as part of the Rocky Mountain Land Library's "A Reading List For the President Elect: A Western Primer for the Next Administration."
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Read in April, 2008
The 3 book series wasn't quite what I expected, but it was pretty good. The environmental aspects of the ending left me hanging, but the human stories were tied up nicely.
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