In the year 2028, a corporation-owned, space-station colony, Island One, circles in orbit around the moon. Downside, on Earth, the formation of the World Government, twenty years earlier, saved the planet from destruction through all-out war. But now their tenuous control of the planet is slipping, no thanks to the greedy corporations who have developed weather-modification technologies to sabotage the economies of already struggling countries, making them easier to overthrow by the revolutionary groups who are cropping up like weeds. David Adams, the first "test tube" biologically enhanced baby, born and bred on Island One, is now a man and ready to leave the colony to embark on a new adventure on Earth. He instead finds himself in the hands of the People's Revolutionary Underground (the PRU), and a sometimes ally, sometimes enemy of its beautiful Arab princess leader Scheherazade. Now he must choose whether to help the revolutionaries or protect his home of Island One.
Ben Bova is a peer of the father's of science fiction, and wrote this novel in 1978. Sci-fi novels of that time are really hit or miss for me, and this one unsurprisingly was just okay. I knew nothing about it, going in, other than my mom used to own a copy and that's how it ended up on my To Read list. So I really read it more to get it off my to list than for any particular interest. However, I do enjoy reading sci-fi books from the 1970s and seeing how their predictions turned out or didn't. I doubt we're going to found some kind of space-station colony within the next ten years. However, I found the politics aspects of the story pretty believable. The idea and characters were interesting(ish) but not super captivating or sympathetic. In the end, I bumped up the speed on the audiobook just to get this one wrapped up.