des nouvelles de Jack McDevitt
Posté : ven. mars 16, 2007 8:57 am
Jack McDevitt a dévoilé un peu l'intrigue de son prochain roman :
Seeker (nominé pour le Nebula). Pour mémoire, plusieurs de ses romans ont été traduit en France : Anciens rivages, Chindi, Deepsix, Les Machines de Dieu, Oméga...
Il s'agit des aventures d'un antiquaire interstellaire.
"He is especially interested in those that have a specific historical connection, like the 9,000-year-old cup that is not only from a very early starship, but from a celebrated one. He's assisted by Chase Kolpath, an attractive and talented young woman who pilots his company's interstellar [ship], the Belle Marie, and also serves as a kind of [Dr.] Watson."
"When Benedict acquires that 9,000-year-old cup, he suspects that someone has discovered a long-lost ship known as the Seeker, McDevitt said. "In the early years of starflight, thousands of people fled deteriorating conditions on Earth for a better place," he said. "They traveled in the Breverhaven and the Seeker. Their intention: They were going to a world they called Margolia, [which was] 'so far away that not even God' could find them. Neither the ships nor any of the refugees were ever heard from again. And Margolia became an interstellar-age [legend, like] Atlantis." "
vous saurez tout en cliquant ici :
http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/index.ph ... 0&id=40546
Seeker (nominé pour le Nebula). Pour mémoire, plusieurs de ses romans ont été traduit en France : Anciens rivages, Chindi, Deepsix, Les Machines de Dieu, Oméga...
Il s'agit des aventures d'un antiquaire interstellaire.
"He is especially interested in those that have a specific historical connection, like the 9,000-year-old cup that is not only from a very early starship, but from a celebrated one. He's assisted by Chase Kolpath, an attractive and talented young woman who pilots his company's interstellar [ship], the Belle Marie, and also serves as a kind of [Dr.] Watson."
"When Benedict acquires that 9,000-year-old cup, he suspects that someone has discovered a long-lost ship known as the Seeker, McDevitt said. "In the early years of starflight, thousands of people fled deteriorating conditions on Earth for a better place," he said. "They traveled in the Breverhaven and the Seeker. Their intention: They were going to a world they called Margolia, [which was] 'so far away that not even God' could find them. Neither the ships nor any of the refugees were ever heard from again. And Margolia became an interstellar-age [legend, like] Atlantis." "
vous saurez tout en cliquant ici :
http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/index.ph ... 0&id=40546