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Science Fiction Writers React to Spirit's Mars Landing
Nancy Beardsley
Washington
Scientists are closely watching America's robotic rover Spirit as it sends
back data and pictures from its new landing site on Mars. Watching, too, are
science fiction writers. They're looking for fresh story ideas, and wondering
how new findings will compare to the imaginary worlds they've created in their
fiction.
Science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson cheered along with lots of other
people when the U.S. space agency NASA landed its robotic rover on Mars. Now
he says he's most interested in getting answers to the same question that's
long haunted Mars-watchers.
"They landed on a dry lake bed with the idea that if when it was a lake
there [were] bacteria alive on the bottom of the lake, it would have left fossil
layers, which would be a sign that Mars at one time had life. And if at any
time Mars had life there would be a strong possibility that it [is] still alive
somewhere under ground near heat sources. So finding out something from Mars
would give us that first data point where we could begin to get a better handle
on how lonely we are in the universe."
The possibility of life on Mars has tantalized generations of storytellers,
from H.G. Wells and Edgar Rice Burroughs in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
to the makers of recent sci-fi action films like The Red Planet.
Kim Stanley Robinson has made an acclaimed contribution of his own to Mars
lore, with a trilogy published during the 1990s. In his novels Red Mars, Green
Mars, and Blue Mars, he wrote about a twenty first century expedition to colonize
the planet. He believes the Martian setting is bound to attract writers like
himself.
"If you have a world next door to you which can be seen with the naked
eye, but yet is empty and full of the Utopian possibilities of a new society
and all that might follow from that - for a science fiction writer interested
in these kinds of issues, it's just the perfect place," he said.
A century ago, points out Mr. Robinson, Mars was only an image in a telescope,
leaving science fiction writers free to conjure up all kinds of colorful fantasies.
"That idea of six-armed people on these giant canals crisscrossing a dying
planet [was] actually based on the best scientific information they had at that
time," he said. "But when they discovered the atmosphere was one percent
of earth's and entirely carbon dioxide, then clearly it was not a place where
it could sustain the kind of life forms that H.G. Wells had populated the planet
with."
Writers like Ray Bradbury responded to discouraging findings by imagining Mars
as a place where the ghosts of alien life continued to haunt visitors from Earth.
Then, beginning in the 1960s, a series of unmanned probes of Mars provided science
fiction writers like Kim Stanley Robinson with a wealth of new information about
the red planet.
"In my stories the planet has vast sources of water underground, which
I think we are now establishing is indeed the case," said Mr. Robinson.
"But also, in the Viking era it was pretty well agreed that the planet
was dead and had never had life. And in that case you have a big rock with a
lot of water on it fairly close to the sun, [so] you could terraform it - essentially
import to Mars all the species and ecozones of earth and make a planet out of
it that we could then inhabit. What's happened since I wrote my books is that
the possibility that there already is life on Mars complicates that whole picture.
The comforting thing to me is that my books will still stand. The possibility
of terraforming will remain no matter what we find in these subsequent explorations."
Science fiction author Ben Bova has also been following the Mars landing, wondering
how well findings will match what he imagined in his 1992 novel Mars, followed
by Return to Mars.
"It's a planet that is more earthlike than any other world in the solar
system," he said. "And yet it is very, very different from our world.
It's a bone dry desert from pole to pole. It's very cold. And the big question
of course is, is there life on Mars, or was there once life on Mars? And in
my novel I took a novelist's prerogative and answered in the affirmative - microscopic
life, very interesting but different forms of life exist on Mars. I think they
once did."
And if life, or the possibility of life, does exist, what then? Both Ben Bova
and Kim Stanley Robinson write about the competing interests and moral dilemmas
created by the discovery of a new biological frontier in space. Kim Stanley
Robinson believes that if bacteria are found on Mars, a spirited debate could
follow over how it should be protected.
"There are people who argue, bacteria - we kill millions of them with our
mouthwash, don't worry about it," he said. "There are other people
saying, life on another planet is the biggest scientific discovery we will have
ever made, if we make it, and we'd have to stay off Mars for a really long time
until we were quite certain we knew what we were studying."
In Ben Bova's fiction, the competition between those who want to study Mars
and those who want to exploit it for commercial purposes is a central theme.
Mr. Bova believes organizing the first human expedition to Mars will be difficult.
"As I wrote in my novel Mars, you're going to need a driving spirit who
cajoles the governments of earth into spending the money to send a human expedition
to Mars," he said. "I foresee a time when we will explore Mars. But
colonize in the sense of setting up homes and shopping malls? No. I've lived
in Florida too long to want to see Mars done in in that way."
Ben Bova says he remains fascinated by Mars, and might do another story set
there in the future. Kim Stanley Robinson believes he's done writing about the
planet. He's currently working on a novel about global warming set in Washington,
D.C. But he says the Mars landing raises an important issue for all science
fiction writers these days.
"Once the whole world becomes like a science fiction novel - you wake
up, and you see these things on TV and read about them in the newspaper - what
does the actual science fiction novel have to say that's different from ordinary
American reality?"
Kim Stanley Robinson believes the most intriguing science fiction novels of
the future could be the ones that explore the way science - and science fiction
- are beginning to merge.
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