The Silver Ship and the Sea
by:
Brenda Cooper (author)
The colony planet Fremont is joyous, riotous, and very wild. Its grasses can cut your arms and legs to ribbons, the rinds of its precious fruit can skewer your thumbs, and some of the predators are bigger than humans. Meteors fall from the sky and volcanoes erupt. Fremont is verdant, rich,...
show more
The colony planet Fremont is joyous, riotous, and very wild. Its grasses can cut your arms and legs to ribbons, the rinds of its precious fruit can skewer your thumbs, and some of the predators are bigger than humans. Meteors fall from the sky and volcanoes erupt. Fremont is verdant, rich, beautiful, and dangerous. Fremont's single town, Artistos, perches on a cliff below rugged mountains. Below Artistos lie the Grass Plains, which lead down to the sea. And in the middle of the Grass Plains, a single silver spaceship lies quiet and motionless. The seasons do not dull it, nor do the winds scratch it---and the fearful citizens of Aristos won't go near it. Chelo Lee, her brother Joseph, and four other young children have been abandoned on the colony planet. Unfortunate events have left them orphaned in a human colony that abhors genetic engineering--and these six young people are genetically enhanced. With no one to turn to, Chelo and the others must now learn how to use their distinct skills to make this unwelcome planet home, or find a way off it. They have few tools--an old crazy woman who wonders the edges of town, spouting out cryptic messages; their appreciation and affection for each other; a good dose of curiosity; and that abandoned silver space ship that sits locked and alone in the middle of the vast grass plain …
show less
Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780765315977 (0765315971)
ASIN: 765315971
Publish date: March 20th 2007
Publisher: Tor Books
Pages no: 400
Edition language: English
Series: The Silver Ship (#1)
Fremont is a colonized planet, a dangerous planet that always hides predators behind its wildness. Chelo is one of the six altered humans left on this planet - but none of her community of first colonists trust her at all. I didn't like this book because it didn't feel real. It was just too hard to ...
Bit of a slow start, seems like a little too much teenage drama at first, but then the themes start coming into play and the story picks up fast after that. Pretty decent story over all, but not a big build up or climax, and I wasn't fully convinced at the end that the main character really had a go...
I really enjoyed this book. Joseph reminded me very strongly of Charlie Eppes from Numb3rs, both in terms of his genius and his emotional immaturity. Chero, his older sister, reminded me of Don, though not as strongly as Joseph reminded me of Charlie. Much of the book focused on their relationship.I...