Reviews

Arabella of Mars by David D. Levine

teenytinylibrary's review against another edition

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4.0

Arabella loves her homeland, the red sandy planet of Mars. So she's nearly devastated when, after an incident with a thorny bush, her mother determines that she's growing up like a wildling and must, for the sake of her reputation and marital prospects, return to Earth to be trained as a proper young lady. Life on Earth is not the same as roaming the untamed frontier, and when Arabella finds out unfortunate news from Mars, she knows that she has to go back, at any cost.

FANTASTIC! This is one that will capture any steampunk lover's heart. Arabella is so fun and I love the idea of interplanetary travel by airship. There's action, adventure, romance, and so much more. The pacing and writing were delightful and I'm anxious to get to the second one.

quoththegirl's review against another edition

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3.0

I love scifi, and I love maritime adventures, so this premise was right up my alley. Major points to the author for figuring out life on an airship in a fairly plausible way and for the descriptions of how the ship worked! The plot was a bit of a clumsy mess, but the novel overall was fun, and the creative worldbuilding made up for a lot.

mandkips's review against another edition

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adventurous tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75


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whax's review against another edition

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adventurous lighthearted fast-paced

3.25

shelfquest's review against another edition

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3.0

Arabella of Mars takes place on a colonized Mars in the 1800s and in London, England, on Earth. After her mother forces her to leave her father and brother on Mars and move back to London, Arabella finds herself on an urgent journey back to Mars to save her brother. Since she must get there as soon as possible, she finds herself disguised as a boy and brought aboard a ship as the Captain's boy to help him with the navigation automation and do lowly ship duties.

I found the beginning and middle of the book quite difficult to get immersed in. I felt like the story was being forced along rather than willingly being told. Once the ship makes it back to Mars it is a wonderful story, but unfortunately that is only less than the final 20% of the book. In the middle part where they are on the ship traveling to Mars many things were not clear to me, such as how did they breathe in space on an open ship? Helpful questions in the world were not answered or even acknowledged.

Despite this, the world building is really fun. I love the idea of colonized Mars with Martians that resemble crabs or lobsters and we get to see a bit of their customs. Khema, who was Arabella's nanny and tutor growing up, is an interesting character and I would have liked to see more of her.

This book honestly felt more like a draft than a finished book. It didn't flow, the dialogue could be stronger, and Arabella's characteristics were not consistent. On one hand she had absolutely no problem assuming the identity of a lower-class boy, and on the other she absolutely could not deviate from proper customs when acting or replying in a crisis once back as a female. I also would have also liked to see a bit of humor in the book; I think that could have taken it a lot farther than what it is right now. The ending felt rushed and cut off. A bit more of a resolution would have made it more complete, even if it was just a quick summary or epilogue.

I was given a free copy of this book from Tor in exchange for an honest review.

espressobean's review against another edition

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2.0

It had its good points, but it was riddled with issues. The first couple chapters almost made me abandoned the book because they were so bad. I think what was detrimental in the first few chapters and then continued, to a lesser extent, throughout the book was the author's lack of ability to write realistic human interactions and even more so a 16-year-old girl. Instead of writing a character who was a person, he wrote a character who was his estimation of a girl of that age which was really difficult to read without annoyance. At some points dialogue and interactions were passably believable, but most of the time they really detracted from the story which in an of itself was pretty weak and distracting.

These pretty important problems were really strange in comparison to the clear detail and knowledge put into the ship, automaton, and other details. I really didn't believe this as an adult sci-fi novel. Although even as a YA novel it would have had issues.

unicyclegirl's review against another edition

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3.0

☆☆1/2

jrug's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars

Like if PERSUASION and the John Carter books had a baby that got Burroughs' plotting and Austen's characters, humanism, and lack of gross xenophobia/racism. Fun but slight.

lizro23's review against another edition

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2.0

This book was good up until the end where it just crashed and burned.

bookscatsbikes's review against another edition

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4.0

My only question is how did they breathe? The descriptions made me feel like people were outside of the actual ship, for repairs and such, while in space. There is talking of floating but no one wears an oxygen tank or is enclosed in an air-tight ship. I needed one line to address that and I could have let it go.

That aside, I enjoyed the heroine, her adventure, her spunk and her choice in men.