Identify Books Concering Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1)
| Original Title: | Titan |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | Gaea Trilogy #1 |
| Characters: | Bill, Cirocco Jones, Gaby Plauget, Eugene Springfield, Calvin Greene, April Polo, August Polo |
| Literary Awards: | Hugo Award Nominee for Best Novel (1980), Nebula Award Nominee for Best Novel (1979), Locus Award for Best SF Novel (1980), Ditmar Award Nominee for Best International Long Fiction (1980), Analog Award for Best Serial Novel or Novella (1979) |

John Varley
Paperback | Pages: 309 pages Rating: 3.95 | 7765 Users | 299 Reviews
Itemize Out Of Books Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1)
| Title | : | Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1) |
| Author | : | John Varley |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 309 pages |
| Published | : | April 15th 1987 by Ace (first published March 1979) |
| Categories | : | Science Fiction. Fiction. Fantasy. Science Fiction Fantasy. Speculative Fiction. Space. Space Opera. Aliens |
Narrative In Favor Of Books Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1)
It begins with humankind's exploration of a massive satellite orbiting Saturn. It culminates in a shocking discovery: the satellite is a giant alien being. Her name is Gaea. Her awesome interior is mind-boggling—because it is a mind. A mind that calls out to explorers, transforming all who enter.Rating Out Of Books Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1)
Ratings: 3.95 From 7765 Users | 299 ReviewsArticle Out Of Books Titan (Gaea Trilogy #1)
This is one of those books I read back when it came out and then let sit on my shelf for a couple of decades. I did the same thing with Dune, Silverbergs MajipoorChronicles, and other books of that era. There were somethings I remember, like the centaur-like Titanides, And a lot of stuff I didnt. Its a good book, and Im interested in reading the next two novels if they ever come out cheap on the Kindle. Im pretty sure Ive tossed the old paperbacks I owned. Good classic Sci-Fi. It hasnt agedThis book is GOOD! I love it. I need to read it again! And so I did. It's still good. This book is full of strong, interesting female characters. Sex. Fascinating aliens. The Titanides are awesome. I don't think I'd mind being one. They sing a lot and have several genitals which is pretty cool. Their names are chords. There's blimps and angels. Nothing is as you totally expect it to be. It takes a while for it to go from space ship lingo to, whoa. WTF? How interesting!This guy goes well with
Titan is a rather surprising and accomplished find among ANY SF collection. There's a lot of imagination and world-building stuffed in these pages. I'd say it's better than Farmer's Riverworld series, but since I hadn't read them all, I can't say for sure. Here are the really cool bits: Varley literally builds a world with a vast intelligence playing god within it. I was reminded of Bear's Eon at first until I realized that Titan came first and the whole tunnel of alternate dimensions doesn't

A fantastic book that should not be judged until all three books in the trilogy have been digested. This book lays the foundation for the two to come. This epic trilogy was the first thing I thought of when I saw the previews to the movie Avatar and I was so bummed when I realized that I was not looking at the broad face of a Titanide, but another creature from another story. If this trilogy is ever put on the big screen, I hope they stay true to the tone of the books, dont remove or dumb down
Titan is about 4 hours of reading about humans first contact with aliens. It starts well but Varley soon introduces too much magic for my taste. The storyline follows a logical path at a reasonable pace, despite some long rather pointless parts mostly about man vs different climates. The end is fair enough. The science is mostly realistic but not innovative. The politics is limited. All in all a decent novel but it doesnt improve on similar classics like Ringworld or Rendezvous with Rama to
While it's true that I have plenty of never-before-read fiction on the To Read shelf, I've been hankering recently to reread this series, one of my favorites.Not only does it have one of my favorite characters - Cirocco Jones, subsequently the Wizard of Gaea - but also one of my favorite alien races - the Titanides:(view spoiler)[ (hide spoiler)](Which image I've hidden in a spoiler because some readers might find Titanide dressing conventions pornographic.)See my review of the entire trilogy
Generally considered SF, this book has a lot of fantasy in it. It's full of interesting ideas and well written. Definitely worth the read.


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