The Coming
by
Joe Haldeman
The Arrival Is Imminent
Joe Haldeman's latest novel, a tightly constructed near future thriller called The Coming, begins by recapitulating a classic science fictional motif: the moment of first contact with an alien intelligence.
Joe Haldeman's latest novel, a tightly constructed near future thriller called The Coming, begins by recapitulating a classic science fictional motif: the moment of first contact with an alien intelligence.
The story begins on October 1, 2054. Aurora (Rory) Bell, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Florida, has just made
Mass Market Paperbound, 288 pages
Published
November 1st 2001
by Ace Books
There is a good chance some of your friends read this book. Sign in to see!
sign in »
Friend Reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book,
please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
Community Reviews
(showing
1-30
of
423)
Well, many Joe Haldeman books are similar. This one moves at at breakneck pace. I think I read it in 4 sittings over 5 days. The pace is amazing. The basic story is well done. Alien visitors are on the way, and Haldeman uses our response to their Coming to explore the weird, scary, familiar, and depressing milieu of Earth in 2054.
All the future tech stuff reads as absolutely plausible, though some of the social stuff is suspect. Homosexuality is federally outlawed? Really? But most ...more
All the future tech stuff reads as absolutely plausible, though some of the social stuff is suspect. Homosexuality is federally outlawed? Really? But most ...more
This book doesn't offer much in the way of original SF ideas and the ending is a damp squib, but it's interesting for the way it is constructed. It is a First Contact story with a premise similar to that of Sagan's Contact.
There are multiple viewpoints but instead of rotating around the characters and giving each perspective over the whole time period of the story, time progresses continually. Viewpoint switches are like momentum transfer in collisions; one character bumps into anoth...more
There are multiple viewpoints but instead of rotating around the characters and giving each perspective over the whole time period of the story, time progresses continually. Viewpoint switches are like momentum transfer in collisions; one character bumps into anoth...more
The Coming is an interesting and shortish novel set in mid twenty first century America, concerning a small group of characterss and their relationships to each other, while the world is awaiting the arrival of some aliens from outer space. A message has been recieved 'We are coming'. Nothing else is known about the visitors, so tension and conspiracy rises throughout the world and humanity. Of course we have the scientists insisting that the visitors will be peaceful, whilst the US govenment a...more
Rachel
rated it
Shelves:
sf,
read-2009,
read-on-a-plane,
bought-with-james,
bought-used,
male-author,
male-author-hero
I'd had The Forever War recommended to me, and thought it was brilliant, so I was excited to see that Joe Haldeman was still writing science fiction. I started reading his new books with this one.
The book starts out with a detailed description of an office--and by extension, life and the world--in what is clearly a technologically advanced future Earth. This comes before the surprisingly undramatic reveal that Dr. Aurora Bell, to whom the office belongs, has received a message from o...more
The book starts out with a detailed description of an office--and by extension, life and the world--in what is clearly a technologically advanced future Earth. This comes before the surprisingly undramatic reveal that Dr. Aurora Bell, to whom the office belongs, has received a message from o...more
In the middle of the 21st Century, Aurora Bell is an Astronomy professor at the University of Florida in Gainesville. One day, she receives a message from outer space ("We're Coming") that seems to herald the arrival of alien visitors. The alien ship is traveling at just under the speed of light, and will arrive on New Year's Day, three months from now.
Earth of the mid-21st Century is not prepared for any sort of invasion. Global warming has begun to alter Earth's climate. ...more
Earth of the mid-21st Century is not prepared for any sort of invasion. Global warming has begun to alter Earth's climate. ...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Different ending than I was expecting, I guess I was comparing the coming of the aliens to other scifi books read. Good book overall; could have tied up a couple of loose ends. A few characters could have been left out of the story; I felt these people were a waste of time writing. Having the chapter titles named after the main character involved in the chapter was unique.
I will read more of Mr. Haldeman's books.
I will read more of Mr. Haldeman's books.
My first Haldeman, possibly last. Not much more than a sketch of a future U.S. impacted by global warming, rampant crime, and ineffective government. What was the point? Aliens are coming, but we never learn much as to why. Like a souffle that collapses before completely rising.
The book was exciting at times but I think all the build up Haldeman creates is wasted on his short endings. It was the same with his book Camouflage. A lot of build up and then the ending only gets one or two pages.
If you read the jacket summary, you think this book is about first contact. It's not. This book is a strange tale of the interactions of several people in a florida town some fifty years in the future. One is a scientist. Another is a violinist. Another is a mid level mafioso. The plot winds around their relations, and moves randomly toward the reveal, which is neither predictable nor interesting. The plot would only change infinitesimally if the alien signal/first contact element was removed. T...more
While I've loved some of Haldeman's other books, this one was disappointing. Too much time on the Mafia and a broad group of characters, not enough on The Coming and then ended way too fast.
Utterly enjoyable, this is a charming little title and the POV shifts are just marvelously executed. Would have been a five but the ending was coming a mile off, but a very neat read nonetheless.
Swing-and-a-miss, Joe, swing-and-a-miss. Interesting premise, unconnected plot, and a blase climax. I was *this* close to putting this on my avoid-at-all-costs shelf, but since it was a fast read, I didn't lose that much of my life to it.
An absorbing and fluid page-turner. Haldeman deftly balances a continual shifting narrative voice and knows when to hold back and when to drop a clue. Very, very good.
Good human drama.
NOT about first contact.
Great dialogue and characters.
Cool little twist at the end there.
NOT about first contact.
Great dialogue and characters.
Cool little twist at the end there.
This is the worst Haldeman I read...
I'm usually a big fan of his work, but this particular book bored me a lot - don't read me wrong, Joe Haldeman style is there, and it's pleasant to read, but the story feels almost as empty as in a Dan Brown novel (sorry Joe).
But this will not stop me in my quest to read all his books ;)
I'm usually a big fan of his work, but this particular book bored me a lot - don't read me wrong, Joe Haldeman style is there, and it's pleasant to read, but the story feels almost as empty as in a Dan Brown novel (sorry Joe).
But this will not stop me in my quest to read all his books ;)
Craig J.
added it
The Coming by Joe Haldeman (2001)
What happens when you start a book with a great scifi premise? Well, you finish it with great expectations!
The Coming is such a book with a fantastic beginning . . . that peters-off into a soup opera between university uppity-ups versus government mambo-jumbo versus personal hijinks . . . boring (as far as the story goes). Even as we heads for the climactic finish . . . it fizzles off to a couple of pages of blah!
I give this novel 3 stars . . . mostly for the first 30 pages...more
The Coming is such a book with a fantastic beginning . . . that peters-off into a soup opera between university uppity-ups versus government mambo-jumbo versus personal hijinks . . . boring (as far as the story goes). Even as we heads for the climactic finish . . . it fizzles off to a couple of pages of blah!
I give this novel 3 stars . . . mostly for the first 30 pages...more
Well, it was not as good as some other Haldeman books. The twist at the end seemed more appropriate for a short story...then again, this is a pretty short book.
Its ok but not that much.
Haldeman's multinarrative attempt at looking at how a community responds to the possibility of first contact is definitely different but ultimately disappointing. Haldeman does have very interesting ideas of where the future of the porn industry is headed though (I'll leave it cryptically at that!)
A little slow in the beginning, interesting in parts, too many loose ends at the finish. Not a bad beach read, where I read it. I'll have to check out The Forever War by him.
This is only the second book I have read of Haldeman's (first was Camouflage) and so far I am impressed. Very fast reads, entertaining, and thought provoking.
He gave a very vivid and plausible picture of a possible near-future.
Definitely recommended.
He gave a very vivid and plausible picture of a possible near-future.
Definitely recommended.
Such great writing. Too bad the great mystery of the book, after making a thundering entrance, decides to just flop over and play dead. Such a waste. Haldeman's been doing that a lot lately.
Interesting and very readable, though with kind of a puzzling ending.
Alien contact
Todd
added it
Doug Silver
added it
There are no discussion topics on this book yet.
Be the first to start one »
Brother of Jack C. Haldeman II
Haldeman is the author of 20 novels and five collections. The Forever War won the Nebula, Hugo and Ditmar Awards for best science fiction novel in 1975. Other notable titles include Camouflage, The Accidental Time Machine and Marsbound as well as the short works "Graves," "Tricentennial" and "The Hemingway Hoax." Starbound is ...more
More about Joe Haldeman...
Haldeman is the author of 20 novels and five collections. The Forever War won the Nebula, Hugo and Ditmar Awards for best science fiction novel in 1975. Other notable titles include Camouflage, The Accidental Time Machine and Marsbound as well as the short works "Graves," "Tricentennial" and "The Hemingway Hoax." Starbound is ...more
Share This Book
No trivia or quizzes yet. Add some now »

Loading...







































