Reviews

Rite of Passage by Alexei Panshin

the_graylien's review against another edition

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4.0

Continuing my intermittent reading of the Hugo and Nebula Award winning novels, I come to this one, probably the best in my back and forth chronological reading of these award winners since Flowers for Algernon.

Set in the late 2100s (at the very end of the novel, it's 2200), this novel is narrated by the fourteen-year-old protagonist Mia Havaro. She begins the book by explaining how Earth became overpopulated and humankind had to leave it, voyaging across the universe to colonize other planets, but mainly living in huge ships. She is an inhabitant of one of these ships, along with some 20,000 other people.

To pass into adulthood, at around the age of 14, children must be dropped on to one of the colonized planets and survive of a month. If they do, they return to their homes on the ships, having become adults.

This may sound like it might fit in right alongside the current young adult dystopian fiction plot, but it's anything but.

The book is about a physical and philosophical ascent into adulthood, it's beautifully written, and it's a piece of fiction, written nearly 50 years ago now, that I really enjoyed.

I was pleasantly surprised and I highly recommend it.

*- This book won the Nebula Award for Best Novel, awarded for the year 1968.

18thstjoe's review

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4.0

like a modern Heinlein juvenile....

traveller1's review

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3.0

If memory serves I first read this as it was in my Eng lit class at high school. Not a half bad story. Not this edition, cannot in fact recall the edition I read.

bmartino's review

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4.0

Style-wise it felt like a much more modern YA book than something written in the late 60's. Quite enjoyable.

josephfinn's review

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4.0

What starts as a coming-of-age romp turns into something much deeper, even if that something deeper feels slightly rushed at the end.
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