From rec.arts.sf.reviews Thu Jan 5 13:34:24 1995 Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews,rec.arts.books.reviews Path: news.ifm.liu.se!liuida!sunic!pipex!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!postmodern.com!not-for-mail From: ecl@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com (Evelyn C Leeper) Subject: THE SECRET OCEANS by Betty Ballantine Message-ID: <9412291324.ZM1867@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com> Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Sender: mcb@postmodern.com (Michael C. Berch) Organization: The Internet Date: Thu, 5 Jan 1995 02:58:11 GMT Approved: mcb@postmodern.com (rec.arts.sf.reviews moderator) Lines: 47 Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.sf.reviews:708 rec.arts.books.reviews:174 THE SECRET OCEANS by Betty Ballantine Bantam, ISBN 0-553-09660-5, 1994, about 160pp, $29.95 A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1994 Evelyn C. Leeper Given the success of DINOTOPIA, what could be more natural than trying to do another book with the same format to reach the same market? But there are a couple of problems with THE SECRET OCEANS: the artists they have commissioned are no James Gurneys, and people are just not as interested in sea dwellers as they are in dinosaurs. I say that the artists are no James Gurneys, but another problem is that there are twelve artist instead of just one. DINOTOPIA was a single coherent vision. THE SECRET OCEANS alternately pictures the undersea world as luminous, cartoonish, impressionistic, muddled, and so on. It's possible that each artist's paintings form a coherent view, but while there is a list of which pages were done by which artists, *there are no page numbers*! There is also a story, but I couldn't get past the oh-so-cliche beginning: a research team comprising a female ex-Soviet submarine commander, a Scottish-Japanese chief engineer, a very ecologically- minded scientist, a fourteen-year-old boy who's a musical genius and speaks eight languages, a fifteen-year-old girl who's an electronics whiz and helped develop the computer of the submarine they will be exploring in, and a science reporter prepare to leave in a new undersea exploration vessel named the "Turtle." I don't know if this is too 50s, too Hollywood, or both, but it's too something for me. Now maybe I'm expecting more of this than I should. It appears to be written for a "young adult" level, so it could be that the formula writing is part of the package, but I can't really recommend this book. %A Ballantine, Betty %T The Secret Oceans %I Bantam %C New York %D October 1994 %G ISBN 0-553-09660-5 %P 160pp [approx.] %O hardback, $29.95 -- Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | Evelyn.Leeper@att.com There's always an easy solution to every human problem - neat, plausible, and wrong. -- H.L. Mencken