The Halcyon Drift
1972 • 176 pages

Ratings1

Average rating3

15

I come to this book very late, having read it for the first time only today, and I definitely like it. I feel sympathy for the hero, although he's rather grumpy and alienated from humanity; and his progress through the story is interesting. I like the fact that the one woman in an otherwise male story doesn't become romantically or sexually involved with anyone (although young Johnny seems ineffectually interested). Overall it makes a good story, and it's well written by the standards of sf in 1972.

The pace is leisurely, and I became rather weary of technobabble in the descriptions of space travel, even though it's well done.

Faced at one point with a slow and uneventful journey across an uninhabited planet, the author doesn't skip from beginning to end as some authors would, but talks us through it with descriptions of the changing landscape along the way.

At this point I don't feel enthusiastic enough to give the book more than 3 points, but it was an agreeable experience, worth reading, and I feel motivated to try the sequels.

March 29, 2016Report this review