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Central Heat

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The disk, thin and gray, was undoubtedly alien. Scientists gathered on the moon to track its enigmatic course through space. But their fascination soon turned to horror...

FOR THE DISK PASSED BEFORE THE SUN AND BLOTTED IT OUT COMPLETELY.

On Earth a new ice age began. Billions perished in the bone chilling cold. The lucky few escaped underground - doomed to an airtight existence near the blazing heart of the world.

Now, far beneath the unnatural cold of a once-green world, Earth's last survivors plan to resurface. And when they do, they will reclaim a lost technological legacy... and prepare for the aliens' return.

294 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published November 1, 1988

23 people want to read

About the author

David Dvorkin

45 books27 followers

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Patrick Scheele.
182 reviews1 follower
October 12, 2016
This book starts off promising in the first part with some crazy aliens destroying the sun, but it loses direction after that. The protagonist of the second part lives with other people in caves deep under the ground. He tries to prove that the surface of the earth is still (or again) hot enough to sustain life, but he fails miserably. He then proceeds to climb up anyway, because... well, he FEELS he's right... ugh, the stupid is strong in that one!

Anyway, he's also a racist and obsesses over every pretty woman he meets. But that's ok, because later on it's revealed that it's all the fault of those EVIL Christians in the caves who brainwashed him or something. The writer then proceeds to randomly sing the praises of birth control in part 3. Funny, with billions of people dead and only a few survivors, you'd think children would be welcome...

In the last part, Dvorkin finally gets around to the actual story again. Our hero manages to trick the aliens into sending a ship with an ambassador. Using a few hundred soldiers and the element of surprise, he captures the aliens and their ship. Of course, aliens advanced enough to blow up the sun from thousands of light-years away would be especially trusting of their victims and not even bother to add some fool-proof defenses, which should be trivial for them. Of course our hero isn't worried about retaliation from the aliens, because he's sure human scientists can take apart the alien ship and use that knowledge to create an invasion fleet so humanity can strike back at the aliens.

After a promising start, this book turned into a pathetic mess. At least now I know to avoid the author's other books.

2 reviews
April 10, 2020
A most unsatisfactory end of the world story about naughty aliens blocking the sun and causing death, destruction and other unpleasant stuff. There is the kernel of a good story here, but the author fumbles the ball with hackneyed dialogue and half baked situations. I couldn't finish it.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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