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Bova, Ben Able One ISBN 13: 9780765323866

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9780765323866: Able One
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When a nuclear missile launched by a rogue North Korean faction explodes in space the resulting shockwave destroys the world’s satellites, throwing global communication into chaos. The United States military satellites, designed to withstand such an assault, show that two more missiles are sitting on the launch pad in North Korea, ready to be deployed. Faced with the threat of a thermonuclear attack, the United States has only one possible defense: Able One.

ABL-1, or Able One, is a modified 747 fitted with a high-powered laser able to knock out missiles in flight. But both the laser’s technology and the jet’s crew are untested. What was originally to be a training flight with a skeleton crew turns into a desperate race to destroy the two remaining nukes. Will Able One’s experimental technology be enough to prevent World War III—especially when it becomes clear that a saboteur is onboard?

Able One is a timely thrill-ride by one of science fiction’s most respected novelists.

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About the Author:
Ben Bova is the author of more than a hundred works of science fact and fiction, including Able One, Leviathans of Jupiter and the Grand Tour novels, including Titan, winner of John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel of the year. He received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Arthur C. Clarke Foundation in 2005, and in 2008 he won the Robert A. Heinlein Award "for his outstanding body of work in the field of literature." He is President Emeritus of the National Space Society and a past president of Science Fiction Writers of America, and a former editor of Analog and former fiction editor of Omni. As an editor, he won science fiction’s Hugo Award six times. Dr. Bova’s writings have predicted the Space Race of the 1960s, virtual reality, human cloning, the Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars), electronic book publishing, and much more. He lives in Florida.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:

FIRST STRIKE

CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE

Hank Barstow frowned at the blank screen of his GPS box. Rolling down Interstate 75 at nearly eighty miles per hour, he was looking forward to making a breakfast stop at the Sticky Fingers restaurant a couple of his trucker pals had told him about. Food’s not all that much, they’d said, but there’s this really stacked blonde waitress....

But he needed the doggone GPS to find his way through the streets of Chattanooga and get to the restaurant. Hank had been through Chattanooga plenty of times on his runs down I-75 to Tampa. But this time he had to get off the highway and find that blonde.

And the GPS was dead. Hank pounded a big fist on the gray box mounted on his cab’s dashboard. Didn’t do any good. The doggone screen stayed blank.

A sign whizzed by: TRUCK STOP FIVE MILES AHEAD. I’ll pull in there and dig the road atlas out of the pile in back, he decided.

To Hank’s surprise, the truck stop was filled with tractor-trailer rigs. Unusual for this time of the morning. Drivers were standing around their rigs, a lot of them talking into cell phones. He found a spot out on the grass, parked his rig, and killed the engine.

As he climbed down from the cab he heard a familiar voice yell, "You too, Hank?"

Turning as he stepped onto the grass, he saw one of his old buddies, Phil Camerata, heavy with belly fat, face stubbled, plodding up toward him.

"Me too what, Phil?" Hank asked.

"GPS dead?"

"Yeah? How’d you know?"

Waving at the jam-packed parking area, Camerata said, "Everybody’s GPS is down. Whole GPS system is out."

"Everybody’s?" Automatically, Hank fished in the pocket of his jeans for his cell phone.

Shaking his grizzled head, Camerata said, "Lotsa luck, buddy. Looks like most of the cell phones are out, too."

IN MANHATTAN THE air was filled with the bleating horns of thousands of taxicabs, trucks, cars, and buses, like a rising chorus of wailing lost souls.

The automated tollbooths in all the city’s bridges and tunnels had abruptly shut down, piling cars in long lines behind their unmoving barrier arms. Even in the subway tunnels automated Metro-Card dispensers had gone dead.

Drivers leaned on their horns in maddened frustration. The streets and avenues were choked with honking, steaming vehicles whose sweating, puzzled, cursing drivers stared at the traffic lights, which had all gone blank.

Gridlock, all across Manhattan and rapidly spreading through the other boroughs. The helpless bleat of thousands of taxi, automobile, truck, and bus horns filled the air all across New York’s crowded, choked streets.

GORDON HATHAWAY SWIPED his Visa card through the slot in the taxicab’s bulletproof window, scribbled his signature on the strip of paper that came stuttering out of the chugging machine, then ducked out of the cab while the driver sat in sullen silence. Some sort of Asian, Hathaway thought: the driver was swathed in a white turban and had a deeply black curly beard.

Lower Broadway was a total bedlam of gridlock, cabs and trucks and city buses sitting unmoving, horns blaring insanely, drivers and radiators fuming. Do better on foot, Hathaway told himself as he headed down toward Wall Street.

Fifteen minutes later he was panting from the unusual exertion, his three-piece suit rumpled, his brand-new shirt soaked with perspiration. When he finally got to the lobby of the building where his brokerage firm was quartered, he saw a crowd of his fellow brokers milling about in dazed confusion.

"You hoofed it out here for nothing," one of his buddies told him as Hathaway tried to push through the throng to the elevators. "The office’s closed."

"Closed?"

"Whole damned market’s closed. All the computers are down. Nothing’s going to happen today, Gordo."

Hathaway’s jaw dropped open.

"The New York Stock Exchange is closed? I can’t believe it!"

"Believe it," said his buddy sourly.

IN BOSTON’S CHILDREN’S Hospital the head of the surgical team gaped at the suddenly blank display screen, his blue eyes above his surgical mask going so wide you could see white all around the irises.

"What happened?" he whispered harshly.

His chief nurse shook her head. "The screen’s gone out."

"I can see that!" Louder, snarling.

One of the assistant surgeons said needlessly, "The patient’s open."

The baby on the surgical table was only three weeks old. She was undergoing surgery to correct an aneurysm in her aorta that threatened to kill her before she’d seen one month of life.

"Get the screen back up!" the head of surgery demanded of no one in particular, of everyone in the surgical theater.

The actual surgery was being performed remotely, over an electronic link, by a surgeon in Minneapolis who was recognized around the world as the best and most experienced man for this particular procedure. But the link had abruptly shut down in the middle of the operation.

"Get it back up!" the head of surgery shouted again.

"We’re trying," said the computer technician from her console off in a corner of the surgery theater. She was almost in tears.

"The patient . . ." said one of the nurses.

With a growl that was almost feral, the head of surgery said, "I’ll have to finish this myself, goddammit to hell."

He was a very good surgeon, but not good enough. The infant died on the table, four days short of her first month of life.

IN THE HEADQUARTERS of Travis Broadcasting Systems, in Atlanta, Herman Scott blinked unbelievingly at the wall full of monitor screens. Seven— no, eight— of the thirty had crapped out. Make it ten. In stunned amazement he watched as, one after another, the remaining twenty screens broke into hissing snowy static and then went dead gray.

The big electronic map that covered one entire wall of the monitoring center froze. Every last one of the pinpoint lights that showed where the satellites were in their orbits winked out.

We can’t have all thirty satellites going down at once, Scott said to himself, trying to remain calm. Must be a power failure here in the building.

But the big map was still lit, and a glance at the lights and gauges of his console told him that electrical power was normal, and the backup power system was in the green too.

A couple of the other engineers were getting up from their consoles, confusion and outright fear on their faces.

"What’s going on?" one of them asked.

As if I know, Scott said to himself.

"How can all thirty birds go down at once?"

Something very bad is happening here, Scott realized. Something terrible.

His console phone buzzed. Picking it up automatically, his eyes still on the dead screens, Scott heard the angry voice of the news bureau’s chief:

"We’re off the air! How the fuck can we be off the air in the middle of the sports report?"

IN LONDON, SIR Mallory Hyde-Grosvener was pacing up and down his office, desperately trying to get a phone connection to Singapore. He had pulled off his tweed jacket ten minutes earlier, crumpled it into a ball, and thrown it with main force against the wall where the portrait of his grandfather hung watching him with hard unblinking eyes. Through his office window he could see chaos on the floor of the market, absolute chaos. All the boards were down; where up-to-the-second market numbers should be flashing there was nothing but dead darkness. Every bloody man on the floor had a telephone jammed to his ear, red-faced and screaming.

Sweating, his impeccable gray tie pulled loose from his collar, he bellowed into his own dead phone while his grandfather’s image frowned sternly at him.

COLONEL BRADY DESILVA was also sweating heavily as he sat in the command center at NORAD headquarters in Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado.

"They’re all out?" he asked, his voice already hoarse from yelling at his staff officers.

Captain Nomura nodded. "Almost, sir. Four commsats are still on the air, but they’re in and out. Sputtering, kind of."

"Sputtering," DeSilva echoed darkly.

Nomura was normally unflappable. But even his usually deadpan face was sheened with perspiration, his dark eyes blinking nervously.

"The milsats are okay, mostly, sir," the captain said. "But the commercial birds have gone dead, just about all of them."

"Half our communications traffic goes through those commercial satellites," DeSilva muttered.

"The early-warning system is functional," said the captain, trying to sound cheerful. "If anybody tries to attack us while the commercial birds are down, we’ll spot them right off."

DeSilva growled at his aide. "And how the hell will we get the warning out? Carrier pigeons?"

GENERAL "BERNIE" BERNARD had been holding the phone to his ear for so long he felt as if it had taken root in his skull. He was pacing behind his desk, too edgy to sit.

To his credit, he and his staff at Space Command headquarters had not panicked when the satellite communications system started to break down. But he was scared; for the first time in his life, this former B-52 pi lot who had flown combat missions over Bosnia, Iraq, and Afghanistan was scared.

At last a voice crackled, "The President is coming on the line now."

A click. Oh shit, Bernard thought. It’s gone dead again.

But then a crisp voice said, "General Bernard."

Bernard automatically stiffened to attention. "Mr. President."

"What’s going on?"

"All the commercial satellites over this hemi sphere have gone dark, sir."

"I know that. What about—"

"The birds orbiting over the other side of the planet are degrading rapidly. They’re dying, one by one."

"Jesus."

"As you know, sir, yesterday we tracked an unannounced rocket launch from North Korea. We went on alert, but the bird went into a geosynchronous orbit, twenty-two thousand miles up. It was a satellite, not a missile."

"So?" the President demanded.

"Three hours ago there was a nuclear detonation at geosynch altitude. The electromagnetic pulse from the explosion knocked out almost all the unhardened satellites over our half of the globe."

"The communications satellites?"

"Commsats, yessir. Weather satellites too. Landsats, ocean surveillance— they’re all down, sir."

"But your military satellites are protected, aren’t they?"

"Yes, sir. Most of them. A few of the older ones have gone dark, but the others seem to be holding up. So far."

"Our military communications, the early-warning satellites, they’re all okay, aren’t they?"

"For the most part, sir."

A heartbeat’s pause. Then, "What do you mean, ‘for the most part’?"

General Bernard replied, "Sir, our communications needs have grown a lot faster than our milsats can support. The Department of Defense has been using commercial commsats for almost half its day-to-day traffic."

"And now those commsats are down."

"Yes, sir."

Again a pause. Then the President asked, "What about satellites on the other side of the world? Over Russia, China?"

"They’re degrading, sir. It’s not just the EMP that kills ’em. The nuke puts out a big cloud of energetic particles, too: high-energy electrons, protons. They bounce around along Earth’s magnetic field lines like Ping-Pong balls. Those particles can kill unhardened satellites, too."

"So what you’re telling me is that we’re back to 1950, as far as telephone communications are concerned."

"Television, too, sir. Computer networks. Anything that uses satellites to relay information or data. All kaput."

For several long moments the President said nothing. Then he asked, "Is this the first strike in a war, General?"

General Bernard hesitated, then answered, "It’s a good way to start a war, sir. Pearl Harbor, in orbit."

Excerpted from Able One by Ben Bova.
Copyright © 2010 by Ben Bova.
Published in February 2010 by Tom Doherty Associates.
All rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher.

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  • PublisherTor Books
  • Publication date2010
  • ISBN 10 0765323869
  • ISBN 13 9780765323866
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages400
  • Rating

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